The recent postings of favorite Holiday movies made me recall  this 
excellent article on how the song immortalized in MEET ME IN ST.  LOUIS  "Have 
Yourself A Merry Little Christmas"  sung by Judy Garland  actually was actually 
quite bleak if not all together  depressing when originally written.  I 
thought everyone might enjoy  reading  the original lyrics and how it was 
changed, with the cooperation  of the composer.   In Googling  to find the 
article,  I  counted well over a 100 singers who have recorded this song.    
Wow,  
the impact of film on popular culture cannot be  underestimated...
 
freeman 
 
 
 
There's Something About Merry
The history of a popular holiday song -- How ''Have Yourself a  Merry 
Little Christmas'' became one of the season's most beloved  songs

By _Chris Willman_ 
(http://search.ew.com/EWSearch/ew/search/search.html?type=ew:Chris+Willman;)  | 
Jan 08,  2007  
 
 





 
 
 



There are two Christmas anthems locked in a struggle for the nation's soul. 
 One, the perennial leader, is the Nat King Cole-popularized ''The 
Christmas Song  (Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire),'' a glowing portrait of 
America in  heavenly, secular peace. And then we have the challenger: ''Have 
Yourself a  Merry Little Christmas,'' which this year leaped to No. 2 on 
ASCAP's 
annual list  of the most performed holiday songs. ''Chestnuts'' has plenty 
going for it:  embers, tots, reindeer, an assurance of everything in its 
right place, and that  1-to-92 target demographic. But it can't hold a candle 
to 
the depth and richness  of ''Merry Little Christmas,'' which wins our 
hearts by celebrating a quality  that's even more intrinsic to the season: 
emotional ambivalence.  
'''Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas' manages to be happy and sad at 
the  same time, hopeful but full of melancholy, as all the best Christmas 
songs  are,'' says Bette Midler, who sings it on her new CD, Cool Yule. And the 
 song's fascinatingly tangled history has left it with several very 
different  sets of lyrics, from the near-suicidal to the downright ebullient. 
There's even  a recent ''sacred'' rewrite, ''Have Yourself a Blessed Little 
Christmas.'' Which  one you prefer may be the truest Rorschach test of your 
yuletide temperament.  
Hugh Martin, the song's 92-year-old writer, is calling from a California  
studio where he's working on demos for a new musical. He's curious to know 
who's  done ''Merry Little Christmas'' well this year. Though the latest 
interpreters  include Sarah McLachlan, James Taylor, and Aimee Mann, he's most 
excited to  learn that his song has finally merited a hair-metal cover. 
''Twisted Sisters,  is that the group's name? Ha ha ha. That's a hoot!''  
In 1943, Martin and Ralph Blane were an already successful songwriting team 
 hired to pen the songs for the movie musical Meet Me in St. Louis, which  
would pair Judy Garland with her future husband, director Vincente Minnelli. 
 Though Martin and Blane shared credit for the tune, Martin was actually 
the sole  writer of ''Merry Little Christmas,'' and a stubborn one. For the 
now-famous  scene in which Garland and her little sister, a 7-year-old 
Margaret O'Brien, are  despondent over the prospect of moving away from their 
cherished home, he wrote  an initial set of lyrics that were almost comically 
depressing. Among the  never-recorded couplets — which he now describes as 
''hysterically lugubrious''  — were lines like: ''Have yourself a merry little 
Christmas/It may be your  last.... Faithful friends who were dear to us/Will 
be near to us no more.''  
''I often wondered what would it have been like if those lyrics had been 
sung  in the movie,'' laughs O'Brien, now 69. ''But about a week before we 
were to  shoot the scene where Judy sings it to me, she looked at the lyrics 
and said,  'Don't you think these are awfully dark? I'm going to go to Hugh 
Martin and see  if he can lighten it up a little.'''  
As Martin tells it, he initially balked at changing the words. ''They said, 
 'It's so dreadfully sad.' I said, 'I thought the girls were supposed to be 
sad  in that scene.' They said, 'Well, not that sad.' And Judy was saying, 
'If  I sing that to that sweet little Margaret O'Brien, they'll think I'm a 
monster!'  And she was quite right, but it took me a long time to get over 
my pride.  Finally, Tom Drake [the young male lead], who was a friend, 
convinced me. He  said, 'You stupid son of a b----! You're gonna foul up your 
life 
if you don't  write another verse of that song!'''  
Martin finally gave in, coming up with a new, somewhat less downbeat lyric. 
 As sung in the movie, ''Merry Little Christmas'' is a buck-up ballad that  
imagines the possibility of a bright future but finally admits, in the 
song's  most powerful line, that ''until then, we'll have to muddle through 
somehow.''  
Liza Minnelli (Vincente Minnelli and Judy Garland's daughter) remembers her 
 father's stories about telling Martin, '''Nooo, this won't do. Look, the 
movie  is about hope and dreams, and there's gotta be some hope in the song.' 
My  feeling is that Christmastime is about your past, and there comes a 
time when it  does become sentimental, just because you start remembering, and 
people will  always miss somebody at Christmas. But to indulge in that and 
just say  'Everything was better then' — forget it! You've always gotta have 
hope.''  
Meet Me in St. Louis proved to be a huge hit, but there was only a  modest 
market for Christmas pop at the time, and ''The Trolley Song'' became the  
breakout tune, scoring a Best Song Oscar nomination. Still, ''Merry Little  
Christmas'' is one of Garland's most mesmerizing screen moments, and one of 
her  most maternal. ''Out of all my mom's movies,'' says Garland's daughter 
Lorna  Luft, ''that's the hardest scene for me to watch.'' Notes Linda 
Ronstadt,  ''There's so much inherent trouperism in [Garland's] version. 
Because 
one can  imagine the topsy-turvy of her life and how many times she probably 
had  to demonstrate the eternal cheeriness and gleefulness of Christmas.''  
Even so, ''Merry Little Christmas'' seemed destined to languish as a 
beloved  show tune that couldn't quite make it to ''standard.'' Then, in 1957, 
Frank  Sinatra — who'd already cut a lovely version with the movie's 
bittersweet lyrics  in 1947 — came to Martin with a request for yet another 
pick-me-up. ''He called  to ask if I would rewrite the 'muddle through somehow' 
line,'' says the  songwriter. ''He said, 'The name of my album is A Jolly 
Christmas. Do you  think you could jolly up that line for me?''' Not about to 
give 
the Chairman any  lip, Martin made several cheerier alterations, shifting the 
happiness into the  present tense and changing that ''muddle through'' line 
to ''Hang a shining star  upon the highest bough.''  
The peppier Sinatra version turned the song into a Christmas perennial; it  
has since been recorded thousands of times. ''It's been a little 
confusing,''  says Martin, ''because half the people sing one line and half 
sing the 
other.''  It's probably more off-balance than that. Sample a good portion of 
the 500-plus  recordings that are up on iTunes, and most use the Sinatra 
lyrics. Even Garland  herself eventually did. ''But I still kind of like 
'muddle through somehow,'  myself,'' Martin admits. ''It's just so kind 
of...down-to-earth.''  
Of course, the ''happy'' lyrics can still pack an emotional wallop. ''I'm  
surprised that our version is very popular at all,'' says Chrissie Hynde of 
the  Pretenders, whose recording for the 1989 A Very Special Christmas 
charity  album continues to get substantial airplay every year. ''I was in a 
particularly  melancholy mood, so I don't think ours is a cheerful version. 
Singing it upset  me; I was on the verge of tears. I was thinking about 
relationships, and how  things had changed, and the people that I couldn't see 
and 
couldn't be with. But  maybe that [sadness] is what most people feel at 
Christmas, and maybe that's why  people relate to it.''  
Recently, more and more singers have been opting for the darker words. 
James  Taylor, for one, was inspired to go back to the song's bittersweet roots 
after  9/11. He recorded ''Merry Little Christmas'' in fall 2001 and 
released it to  radio soon after (it's included on his new James Taylor at 
Christmas  album). ''It's as though people were suddenly experiencing 
everything on 
a  deeper level for a while,'' says the singer, who was intrigued to learn 
that the  song was penned during WWII. Though Martin has said he wasn't 
consciously  writing about wartime separations, Taylor ''would be very 
surprised 
if he wasn't  somehow influenced by the mood of missing people over the 
holidays and hoping  like hell that they would be home next Christmas, if not 
this one.'' In times of  strife, ''we 'muddle through,' as the lyric says. As 
the best lyric  says.''  
Not everyone feels that way, though. '''Muddle through' is what we  do,'' 
agrees Ronstadt, ''but I love the bravado of 'hanging the shining  star,' 
because it gets past the layers of anxiety to find that little beacon of  hope 
and bravery.'' In her recording, she neatly solves the problem by singing  
both versions of the key line. And that manic-depressive compromise between 
the  muddled and the magisterial might just capture Christmas best of all.   
____________________________________
  
Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas 
ORIGINAL VERSION
Have yourself a merry little  Christmas
It may be your last
Next year we may all be living  in the past
Have yourself a merry little Christmas
Pop that  champagne cork
Next year we may all be living in New York
No  good times like the olden days
Happy golden days of  yore
Faithful friends who were dear to us
Will be near to us  no more
But at least we all will be together
If the Lord  allows
>From now on, we'll have to muddle through somehow
So  have yourself a merry little Christmas now 
JUDY GARLAND VERSION
Have yourself a merry little  Christmas
Let your heart be light
Next year all our troubles  will be out of sight
Have yourself a merry little  Christmas
Make the yuletide gay
Next year all our troubles  will be miles away
Once again as in olden days
Happy golden  days of yore
Faithful friends who were dear to us
Will be  near to us once more
Someday soon we all will be together
If  the fates allow
Until then, we'll have to muddle through  somehow
So have yourself a merry little Christmas now 
FRANK SINATRA VERSION
Have yourself a merry little  Christmas
Let your heart be light
>From now on, our troubles  will be out of sight
Have yourself a merry little  Christmas
Make the yuletide gay
>From now on, our troubles  will be miles away
Here we are as in olden days
Happy golden  days of yore
Faithful friends who are dear to us
Gather near  to us once more
Through the years we all will be together
If  the fates allow
Hang a shining star upon the highest  bough
And have yourself a merry little Christmas now
All three versions of ''Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas'' by Hugh  
Martin and Ralph Blane 1943, 1944 Renewed 1971, 1972 EMI Catalogue 
Partnership  (successor to LOEWS) (PWH)/admin. by EMI Feist Catalog Inc. 
(ASCAP) Used 
by  permission.  
Originally posted Dec 15, 2006 Published  in issue #912 Dec 22, 2006 _Order 
article reprints_ (javascript:void(0))  



         Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
   ___________________________________________________________________
              How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List
                                    
       Send a message addressed to: [email protected]
            In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L
                                    
    The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.

Reply via email to