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Featured

March of the Wooden Soldiers: A New York Christmas TV Memory

By Village Voice contributor, Friday, Dec. 25 2009 @ 8:00AM
Comments (19)
Categories: Holidays
marchofthe.jpg
​

by James H. Burns

On an arctic December night in Brooklyn when I was a tot, my family went to visit a local Christmas attraction. It was one of those "Christmas wonderland" houses, popular at the time, and people lined around the block to take in its colorful lights and seasonal set pieces.

Atop my mother's shoulder I caught my first glimpse of this candy-cane world and a couple of lifesize, papier mache soldiers, and asked:

"Do Laurel and Hardy live here?"

No adults laughed at me, but they may have smiled, because they all knew what I was talking about: Laurel and Hardy's March of the Wooden Soldiers (originally Babes in Toyland), which had already become part of New York's holiday traditions.

In 1933 Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy were at the height of their success. Hardy, from Georgia, and Laurel, a Brit, were solo silent film performers when they were teamed by the Hal Roach Studio in the mid 1920s. After more than sixty shorts and seven features, they were among the few silent film stars to make the transition to talkies.

That autumn Roach decided that their next movie would be based on Babes in Toyland, the operetta by Victor Herbert with lyrics and book by Glen MacDonough, which -- thirty years previously -- had been a smash on Broadway.

Laurel, the creative lead in the duo, sequestered himself with the studio's writers, and they created a musical only loosely inspired by Herbert's and MacDonough's opus.

Laurel and Hardy would play Stannie Dum and Ollie Dee, craftsmen in Toyland (home village to many of our favorite nursery rhyme characters). Aided by Bo Peep and Tom Tom (the Piper's Son), they ultimately confront the villainy of the aged miser, Silas Barnaby, and his legion of fierce "Bogeymen."

Barnaby, one of the great eccentric screen villains, was portrayed by Henry Brandon who, despite his apparently wizened status, was only twenty-two years old.

A scenario elegant in its simplicity ensued, and the Roach crew were painstaking in their efforts to bring the fantasy to life.

"Babes in Toyland's" most unusual aspect is rarely noted: Mickey Mouse appears throughout the film, in what's essentially his sole non-animated movie -- and certainly the only one in which he's portrayed by a costumed monkey. Walt Disney had given Roach permission to use Mickey in the film, though he might have thought better of it after he saw the freakish, simian Mickey in action.

Disney's association with Laurel and Hardy may have helped impact the world of pop culture in another way: According to some of his oldest friends, Disney had been thinking of ideas for a family amusement park as far back as the 1920s. Does it seem a stretch to imagine that the elaborate Toyland helped give the filmmaker some of ideas for Disneyland?

Distributed for Roach by MGM, Babes in Toyland was almost universally well-reviewed when it premiered just after Thanksgiving 1934, but never received a widespread national rerelease.

In 1948, Babes began to be sold to different distributors, which is when it was rechristened March of the Wooden Soldiers. March made its New York television debut nine years later. Usually broadcast on Thanksgiving or near Christmas -- sometimes both -- March soon became, for some of us, nearly as significant a seasonal icon as Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade or the tree at Rockefeller Center.

In the 1970s rumors began to circulate among film buffs that March of the Wooden Soldiers was missing extensive footage. But in New York, we had been seeing those allegedly missing scenes for years -- WPIX, without anyone realizing it, had somehow become the caretaker of the most complete print of March of the Wooden Soldiers in the country.

But in the late '70s Channel 11 lost the license to broadcast the film. And when WPIX's parent company, the Tribune Corpration, acquired all rights to March of the Wooden Soldiers a year or two later, they somehow wound up with the same cut version that was shown throughout the United States; the more complete version appeared to have been lost.

In 1989, a native New Yorker, came to the rescue. Ray Faiola, a CBS executive and film historian, received a phone call from CBS-Fox Home Video's Ken Horowitz, who asked him to find something to make their planned package of Laurel and Hardy comedies a little more special. (Faiola was also heavily involved with The Sons of the Desert, an international Laurel and Hardy appreciation society, which still meets monthly at Manhattans' Players Club.) Faiola began searching for a mint Babes in Toyland. He called the British Film Institute, an archive in Italy, and other likely venues, but no one knew where the missing footage might be.

Finally Richard May, an executive at Turner Broadcasting, suggested that Faiola call Eastman House, a film depository in Rochester that various organizations use to store their films. There he found a pristine copy of Babes in Toyland, from which new prints were struck.

In 1991, Tribune licensed the Samuel Goldwyn Company to produce a colorized version of March. Even most cinema purists didn't object, perhaps because everyone involved with Babes in Toyland who'd been heard from on the subject said they rued that the picture was shot in black and white instead of color.

March of the Wooden Soldiers is a fantasy, but it's not cloying. Laurel and Hardy were comic artists of the first rank, and when they finally made a movie aimed at children, they didn't talk down to their new audience.

Some of us who saw those WPIX showings long ago remember March of the Wooden Soldiers like the shimmer of a jingle bell, or with the warmth of the first light reflected off a snowflake. For us, it was part of childhood. And seeing it again after all these years is like a holiday in the heart.

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Comments (19)

Steve says:

What a great article. March was a Christmas tradition and still is for our family.It brings back such great memories. Thanks for the article!

Posted On: Friday, Dec. 25 2009 @ 10:35AM
Maureen says:

I agree with Steve's post. My family some still here some passed , we absolutly love "March of the Wooden Soldiers/ "Babes In Toyland". Timeless classic. But have not seen it in years.It most certainly brings back special memories.
Merry Christmas everyone.
Maureen in NJ

Posted On: Friday, Dec. 25 2009 @ 2:46PM
Bill says:

Do you know which of the various DVD versions out there is the most complete? My brother and I used to watch it faithfully on WPIX. I'm surprised they didn't wear out their print!

Posted On: Friday, Dec. 25 2009 @ 7:29PM
Bob says:

As far as I know, the "MGM Holiday Classics" version (the cover features 11 identical soldiers lined up in a row along the bottom) is the most complete, and the only one to feature the original "Babes in Toyland" opening, even thought the cover still says March of the Wooden Soldiers. This version is not colorized, however. This film is a holiday tradition with our family. What a pity that Hallmark has seen fit to sit on the rights of the L/H library and not release pristine, remastered DVDs of their other great films.

Posted On: Friday, Dec. 25 2009 @ 8:10PM
Joe Pilla says:

One element that makes this movie a delight is that, amidst the fantastic setting ostensibly designed with children in mind, Stan and Ollie are their recognizable selves, with their usual wonderful character byplay. While the production was big for a Laurel and Hardy movie, and includes that wow climactic battle 'tween "toy" soldiers and Boogeymen, it's the little bits--like Stan's "Peewee" demonstration--between "the boys" that I cherish most.
We could certainly "better" the effects today, but we cannot replace Stan laurel and oliver Hardy.

Posted On: Friday, Dec. 25 2009 @ 11:29PM
Bruce says:

A definite NY tradition--just like Channel 9 showing Mighty Joe Young on Thanksgiving (whihc I never quite understood). NYC local televison was great in the 60's! and late 50's! .

Posted On: Saturday, Dec. 26 2009 @ 8:39AM
Mugweed says:

I always wondered what happened to that movie. I grew up associating it with the holidays. It stopped being shown around the time I started new holiday traditions that involved controlled substances. When I try to describe that and the Yule log to people here in FL they look at me like I'm from Mars. Dumb rednecks...

Posted On: Saturday, Dec. 26 2009 @ 11:55AM
Joe says:

WPIX in NY still shows it every Thanksgiving and Christmas. In fact, it was on yesterday at 1PM. The best DVD addition is the one released by Genius entertainment/Legend Films. That version contains both the original B/W and the new color version(on one disc), both with all the original titles.
Personally, I don't mind the color version because of the subject matter and because Stan Laurel himself has been quoted as saying his only regret about the film is that it was not shot in color.
http://www.amazon.com/March-Wooden-Soldiers-Colorized-Black/dp/B001BSBBI0/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=dvd&qid=1261859936&sr=1-1

Posted On: Saturday, Dec. 26 2009 @ 3:39PM
Benny says:

WPIX TV's Yule Log is the single greatest innovation in television. Now that interior decorators are placing flatscreen digital TVs directly above real fireplaces in every home, the only time of the year to burn a fire AND simultaneously experience the legendary Yule Log is Christmas Day. This is a zen moment that has been coming for over fifty years. Imagine what invading aliens will think of our civilization when they behold this duality of flaming logs, one digital and one defined by mass and solid dimension. To us it's a mere redundancy but to them it could be a profound insult or worse. Planets are blown up for such infractions.

Posted On: Sunday, Dec. 27 2009 @ 2:23PM
Jim Hanley says:

My first experience with March of the Soldiers came in 1959 or 1960, when I clearly remember it being shown on Easter Sunday on Channel 11. It was given much advance promotion by the kids' show hosts of the day, Chuck McCann, "Officer" Joe Bolton, "Captain" Jack McCarthy, and Ray Heaterton, "The Merry Mailman."

I haven't checked any recent video releases, but I doubt they include the complete original release print, which had a rarely seen musical number in a schoolroom.

In 1986, I was witness to a conversation between Felix Knight (Tom Tom in the film) and a man who remembered that scene from seeing it as a child during the original Babes in Toyland release. After thinking about it briefly, Mr. Knight remembered the scene and identified the song, evidently from the original operetta, as "I Can Do that Sum." He said it featured Laurel & Hardy and then-members of Hal Roach Studios' Our Gang acting troupe.

Shortly after that, Ray Fiola was asked if he knew if such footage still existed. His response was that he was unfamiliar with it, but that he expected that Hal Roach Studios would still have it, as "they saved everything and have all sorts of unreleased footage."

It's also worth noting that colorization was given a bad name by Color Technologies, the Ted Turner-owned company, which used a far more limited palette than Colorization, Inc., the Roach-owned company that did much of its early work with laurel & Hardy shorts, including The Music Box.

Posted On: Monday, Dec. 28 2009 @ 5:47PM
Ray Faiola says:

Though I have been asked about the "schoolroom scene" I never speculated that it was even shot, much less survived. There is no known script containing this scene nor are there production stills. Moreover, contrary to the quote above, I can tell you that Roach Studios destroyed almost everything (footage) ancillary to final release prints. Felix Knight did, indeed, perform at several NY Sons functions. Many people in show business have apocryphal remembrances. I'm afraid the schoolroom scene is one of them. Nevertheless, Felix was one of the most gracious gentlemen it was my privilege to know.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 29 2009 @ 7:21AM
Jim Burns says:


Ray beat me to the punch!

;-)

What Felix Knight may have been remembering is that it's certainly possible that there were PLANS for a Little Rascals classroom scene, but there is absolutely NO EVIDENCE that it was ever shot.

In fact, Ray was one of the first people I ever asked about this, years ago!

What I discovered does exist are PHOTOS of the Our Gang cast visiting the set, and the original press book for the movie also includes some spectacular shots of Spanky McFarland posing to do some publicity for the movie.

(There are also some kids who performed smaller roles in the OUR GANG series, playing some of the children in MARCH OF THE WOODEN SOLDIERS.)

Laurel and Hardy enthusiasts have concluded that this is just another urban legend.

Or would that be, "A Toyland Legend"?

;-)

(By the way, it is fun to remember that Hal Roach ORIGINALLY intended BABES IN TOYLAND as an All-Star extravaganza, featuring not only Laurel and Hardy, but his studio's Charley Chase, Patsy Kelley, and....The
Little Rascals.)

Jim Burns (James H. Burns)

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 29 2009 @ 5:25PM
Jim Burns says:


And, For Bruce:

I covered those WOR/Channel 9 KING KONG/MIGHTY JOE YOUNG Thanksgivng Day
marathons, here!

http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/archives/2009/11/king_kong_the_c.php

With MARCH OF THE WOODEN SOLDIERS/BABES IN TOYLAND:

The Goldwyn Company colorized print is still available, I believe, at
least used, from Good Times, over at Amazon, and elsewhere. It was also
the version WPIX showed this past Christmas. It's complete, except for
the "tumbling blocks," of the original opening credits, which originally
revealed the title card, "Babes in Toyland."

Legend did a NEW colorized version, within the last few years, which seems entirely complete. As mentioned by someone here, the disc also gives you the option to watch their digitally restored version, in black
and white. (There's also some nice--but some times unrelated!--extras on
the DVD, including a strange HOWDY DOODY Christmas short that was apparently made for theatrical distribution.)

MGM has also released the original MARCH OF THE WOODEN SOLDIERS/BABES IN TOYLAND, strictly in all its black and white
glory.

Jim Burns (James H. Burns)

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 29 2009 @ 5:29PM
Ira Picker says:

If you think about it,"Babes In Toyland" may be the first "slacker" movie, a glorification of American incompetence. If the soldiers were not manufactured incorrectly, they could not repel the invaders. The imbiciles Laurel & Hardy were the ones to rally the populace. And Stan's idiotic addiction to pee-wee was crucial to the defeat of the invaders. Could there have been a "Stripes" with Bill Murray if not for "Babes". Of course, "Duck Soup" came out in 1933, but in it, Groucho was in a position of authority, Stan and Ollie, clearly were not.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 29 2009 @ 5:50PM
Jim Hanley says:

Sorry for misremembering what you said about the "missing" footage, Ray. It was at a Founding Tent meeting with Rob Falcone one night in 1987 or 1988 that we asked for your opinion.

To clarify, Felix Knight seemed certain that it was in the original version of the film, but was excised for the road show release. Surely, it's possible that his recollection was as faulty 50 years after the fact as mine seems to be about what you said 20 years ago. Still, I prefer to think it may be our there somewhere in a dusty film can, waiting to be discovered, but I'm the eternal optimist.

Posted On: Wednesday, Dec. 30 2009 @ 8:26PM
Richard Finegan says:

Hi Jim and Ray-
Great article, Jim!
Regarding the "classroom scene" I recall talking with an older gentleman at one of the Sons of the Desert conventions many years ago, probably 1986 or a couple years later, who recalled seeing the movie with that scene included. He saw it in the early 1940's while in the service. The print sent out for the servicemen apparently included that scene, or at least one print may have. He seemed quite sure in his memory of this, and indeed said that he'd never have heard of the scene unless he'd seen it himself back then.
So, let's keep seaching and hoping...

And I agree, Felix Knight was a very gracious gentleman.

Posted On: Tuesday, Jan. 5 2010 @ 10:37AM
Jim Burns says:


Guys--

Reading this has prompted me to invent a word:

"Rhumembering"--

Or, perhaps, "misrumembering"--

Or, maybe, even, "Misrumorbering"--

The act, of course, with the best of intentions, of someone only remembering a rumor...

Jim Burns (James H. Burns)

Posted On: Thursday, Jan. 7 2010 @ 7:44PM
Kevin Butler says:


Dear Jim Hanley,

I also remember The local kids tv hosts/performers from

WPIX TV Ch.11 NYC';s glory days"Officer"/"Police Chief Joe"

Bolton,"Captain Jack"McCarthy,"The Merry Mailman"(Ray

Heatherton)and Chuck McCann(and possibly? Paul Ashley's

L&H Hand Puppets)promoting "March Of The Wooden Soldiers"/"Babes In Toyland!"on their shows during the Thanksgiving and/or Christmas Holidays.

Those were wonderful promos for the film and the movie is still a great holiday classic for the entire family.

I'm just sorry that Chuck and The L&H puppets never
got a chance to host the film during the holidays.

I asked Chuck about why he never mc'd the film on Ch.11..since he was the station's premire authority on L&H?

He told me that he didn't know why the station execs didn't allow him to host the film.

It is a situation that has never been explained?

Nevertheless?

The film is still being seen on WPIX TV in NYC and on

other tv stations and on dvd players in this country.

And Chuck McCann is still with us Thank God!

Posted On: Monday, Jan. 11 2010 @ 1:00PM
Bill Tilson says:

I was raised in Kearny,NJ across the wetlands from NYC. As a child back in the 50's and until I left NJ in 1987, I looked forward to March of the Wooden Soldiers and Scrooge more than any other holiday movies. When i first moved to South Carolina we used to get WPIX, then somewhere in the mid 90's WPIX was replaced by WGN out of Chicago. WGN like WPIX showed the March with L&H every Christmas season, but stopped about 4 yrs ago or so.
I finally went out and bought the colorized version on DVD. I believe Scrooge, the 1938 version was shown only once this past holiday season and the 50 version was not on at all this yr. Its sad when 2 great classics are being shunned more and more. TNT shows A Christmas Story continuous for 24 hrs or more. Its good, but does not beat the L&H classic nor the Scrooge version from 38 and 50. In yrs past I have written to TCM,TNT, AMC, WGN and Hallmark to show these classics. Have begged Hallmark to at least let other stations lease the rights to March of the Wooden Soldiers, but to mute ears. I think part of the problem is getting to the right source. These people receiving these emails are young and don't give a you know what as to what I am saying about these classics, as they were probably born in the 70's and early 80's.

Posted On: Saturday, Jan. 23 2010 @ 9:48PM

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  • Energy Bulletin
  • Dry Dipstick
  • IFIWatchnet
  • Al Jazeera
  • chechnya-sl
  • Bushims
  • ACLU's Torture FOIA
  • Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
  • National Security Archive
  • Waxman Committee
  • Ethics Daily
  • Bretton Woods Project
  • Human Rights First
  • Center for Public Integrity
  • GlobalSecurity.org
  • Institute for War & Peace Reporting
  • 9-11 Timeline
  • Iraq Body Count
  • Students for an Orwellian Society
  • Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
  • whitehouse.gov
  • whitehouse.org
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