Merry Christmas 2024!

We’d like to wish you a Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays! To all of our readers, thank you for your support in 2024 and best wishes for 2025!

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: the Canada angle

Rankin Bass Rudolph


The classic Rankin-Bass stop-motion animated Christmas film, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer debuted in 1964. It is typically associated with the United States, but every character (except one) was voiced by a Canadian. Let’s learn more about the Canadians who brought this movie to life!

When work began on the movie, Rankin and Bass decided to use Canadian voice actors for every character except Sam the Snowman, who was voiced by Burl Ives. One reason for this was the lower labour costs in Canada for voice actors.


Another major reason was that the United States had stopped making radio dramas for the most part. In Canada, they were still made for the CBC and this gave Canada a much larger talent pool for voice actors than was available in the United States at the time.


Rudolph was voiced by Billie Mae Richards. She had worked on CBC’s Jake and the Kid and later voiced Tenderheart Bear on Care Bears. She was credited as Billy Richards as producers did not want people to know a woman did the voice. Richards voiced Rudolph until 1979.


Larry Mann voiced Yukon Cornelius. He had appeared in many CBC productions prior to getting the role in Rudolph. Through the 1980s, he was known to Canadians as The Boss in Bell Canada TV commercials.


Paul Soles was the voice of Hermey. He was well known to Canadians as the voice of Peter Parker Spider-Man on the 1960s animated series. He also hosted Take 30 for 18 seasons, was a veteran of the Stratford Festival and won a Gemini Award in 2006.


Bernard Cowan played Clarice’s Father. He also worked as an announcer on Front Page Challenge, The Pierre Berton Show and Wayne and Shuster. His voice work included Rocket Robin Hood and the animated Spider-Man 1960s show. His cousin was Paul Soles.


Alfie Scopp played various Male Elves, Fireball and Charlie-in-the-Box. He had worked on various NFB productions, The Wayne and Shuster Hour, The Littlest Hobo, Street Legal, and The Edison Twins. He died at the age of 101.


Paul Kligman played Donner and Coach Comet. He often worked on CBC, including with Wayne and Shuster, and also voiced J. Jonah Jameson on the 1960s animated Spider-Man show and Friar Tuck on Rocket Robin Hood.


Carl Banas played the Head Elf and various Misfit Toys. He later acted as Byron James on Wojeck, and was a radio personality on CKFM-FM and MIX 99.9. He was also Titanor on Rocket Robin Hood, Schaeffer in The Raccoons and Old Tusk in Babar.


Finally, Stan Francis played Santa Claus and King Moonracer, while Peg Dixon was Mama Claus and various female elves. She voiced Mary Jane Watson on the 1960s animated Spiderman TV show, and also played Mrs. Morrison on the 1956 TV movie Anne of Green Gables.

I hope you enjoyed that look at the Canadian voice actors on Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer, sourced by Canadian History researcher and storyteller, Craig Baird.

Santa Snacks

Herb decides that Santa is above the typical Christmas Eve milk and cookies — chocolate nugget bomb cookies to be precise — so he pulls together a bougie spread for ol’ Kris Kringle and his red-nosed companion. Santa is confused by the espresso and Rudolph seems to appreciate the charcuterie board, complete with name cards. I’d love to know where you find Butterkäse cheese on Christmas Eve in Cold Springs, Manitoba but I digress…

B.C.: A Special Christmas

Johnny Hart’s “B.C.” was one of my favourite comic strips growing up in the 1970s-80s. I loved everything about it: the various cast of cavemen (and women), the non-human cast (dinosaurs, ants, snakes, turtles, wingless birds), the prehistoric landscapes (rolling mountains, volcanoes and the vast ocean) and how his clever humour and physical comedy came to life in the “world” he created.

I remember flipping around the dial in December of 1982(?) and stumbling upon “A Special Christmas,” the B.C. animated Christmas special. It was a big deal — comic strips from the newspaper were rarely put into animation and I instantly was overwhelmed at seeing everything I loved about the comic come to life on TV.

“A Special Christmas” has kind of been lost to history — that was the one and only time I ever watched it, until I began searching for it again on the interwebs a few years ago. Admittedly, the story is a bit weak: it’s a zany story of the two unscrupulous cavemen — Peter and Wiley — who think up a great scheme: create a legend about giving and then sell gifts so everyone can give their neighbours a present on Dec. 26th. But, to their great surprise they find that their myth has become a reality; a day earlier. It’s a loose premise, but if you’re a fan of comic strips — specifically “B.C.” — you won’t want to miss it. Visually, it’s a treat and I also thought they did a nice job applying voices to the various characters in the “B.C.” universe. Merry Christmas!

What Christmas is all about

In “Peanuts,” Linus quoted from the Gospel of Luke on December 20, 1959. His dialogue in that strip was later used in “A Charlie Brown Christmas” in a scene that Charles Schulz had to fight to include, and it became one of the special’s indelible moments.

Did you ever notice that Linus drops his security blanket while sharing “what Christmas is all about?” Even more curious is the point in the speech that he does so. Just as he utters the words “Fear not” from Luke 2:10 ~ “And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people.” I believe this was a deliberate point that Charles Schultz was making, to drop those things of the world we cling to and embrace the good news!

Watch for it at about the :39 second mark. Powerful. A great moment in TV and comics.

The Christmas Spirit

The Planet Joey characters rock out on stage — Peanuts style — to a holiday jingle being played by Joey and Herb. The gang is so full of holiday cheer in fact, that it seems to be seeping into Gaston’s dark soul…

Fire in the Hole

Decorating for Christmas can be dangerous, as Joey and Herb discover. The hard way. Well, at least Herb does. Joey escapes into the house and makes a mental note for next year, while the unsuspecting Herb is going to… need some assistance.

Tree Topper

It’s time to trim up the tree and Joey is having a hard time – like any kid – reaching those top few elusive branches… The family couch turns out to be… not the greatest substitute for a step stool or a ladder. Somehow, it all works out in the end! 

#Believe

Merry Christmas!

We’d like to wish you a Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays! To all of our readers, thank you for your support in 2020 and best wishes for 2021!

Christmas Morning

I’ve been fortunate enough to have lived both of these Christmas mornings. As a kid, I distinctly remember laying in bed, patiently watching each minute pass by in the darkness on my digital clock radio in anticipation of waking my parents up. As a parent – usually staying up half the night – Christmas morning always comes too quickly no matter how long you can get your kids to hold off. Happy Christmas Eve, Planet Joey readers! This is always my favourite day of the holiday season, spent together with family and with palpable excitement and anticipation. Cheers!

Spiked!

The holiday fun continues around Joey’s house, where Herb clearly chose the wrong punch bowl of egg nog. That stuff is potent enough to take Joey’s curls to the next level! And you know it’s a rip-roaring festive event when the cheese ball is brought out… Fun fact: Joey is reading my favourite Christmas comic book, Pink Panther #60, A Pink Christmas.

Snow for Joey

Go figure, now that Joey has moved to northern Manitoba, it’s Christmas and he’s still waiting on some snow to make the festive season feel just right… Things aren’t looking good until Earl arrives on his zamboni and donates just the right amount of the white stuff to make a snow angel, a snowman or have a good ol’ fashioned snowball fight! Fun fact: This is actually a true story! The Arena Manager in my hometown of Thamesford, Ontario (also Earl!) did in fact drive the zamboni around the corner to my house to stave off a green Christmas by dropping off some arena snow on our front lawn – complete with a sign affixed to a broken hockey stick! I’ve been waiting many years to turn this into a comic – God bless you, Earl Carter.