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Re: ho ho who?



I feel somewhat uneasy knowing that a Jew, by writing "White Christmas", has 
been the cause of disappointment in so many Christian kids in the United States 
(at least in NYC).

Bob

----- Original Message ----- 
  From: SamWeiss (at) bellatlantic(dot)net 
  To: World music from a Jewish slant 
  Sent: Friday, December 14, 2001 10:49 AM
  Subject: ho ho who?



  Taking Credit 
  By VIVI ABRAMS 
  Atlanta Jewish Times 


  A Methodist dad wants to get into the Christmas mood. He plays a record of 
"The Christmas Song," and sings along to the familiar "chestnuts roasting on an 
open fire" refrain. Then he feels like a movie, and watches "White Christmas" 
with his family. Before bed, he reads his daughter the Caldecott-winning 
children's Christmas book, "The Polar Express." 

  He's just had a very Jewish night. 

  Not many people know it, but Jews have a long history of orchestrating 
Christmas, back to the early 1800s when French composer Adolphe Adam wrote the 
music for "O Holy Night." 

  "Christmas Song" composer Mel Torme was also Jewish. Chris Van Allsburg, a 
convert to Judaism, wrote "The Polar Express." And "White Christmas," a film 
about song-and-dance men who romance women for the holidays in a Vermont ski 
lodge, had a Jewish star (Danny Kaye), director (Michael Curtiz) and composer 
(Irving Berlin). Berlin, born Israel Baline, wrote "White Christmas" for the 
film "Holiday Inn" in 1942 and resurrected it for the Crosby film in 1954. 

  Actor and commentator Ben Stein recently wrote an essay saying that Jews 
should feel no shame about having so much power in Hollywood because it's a 
sign of how much they love America. He told The Jewish Times the same about 
Christmas. 

  "I have always felt that no one loved Christmas like the Jews," Stein wrote 
in an e-mail. "No family tensions, no disappointments about the wrong gift, 
just that great Christmas spirit. For a Jew to be in America at Christmas, with 
all the love in the air, after two millennia of being hunted and killed at 
Christian holidays, is pure bliss, and I believe we feel it keenly." 

  Nate Teibloom, editor of jewhoo.com, a Web site that identifies famous Jews, 
had a different reason for why Jews involve themselves in the Christmas spirit: 
the bottom line. 

  "There's a huge market," he said. "Virtually every recording artist puts out 
a Christmas album eventually, including Jewish recording artists. It's money in 
the bank. [However,] some Jewish recording artists tend to shy away from doing 
the religious Christmas songs." 

  One Jewish popular songwriter, who asked not to identified, believes so many 
Jewish composers write Christmas songs "because it broadens the field of 
endeavor. 

  "Every year for a couple of months the recordings sell all over again. It's 
the old profit system, not an underwriting of another faith," he said. 

  Teibloom said Jewish songwriters dominated the popular music scene from 
around 1920 to 1965, around the time the Hit Parade made Christmas songs into 
favorites. 

  "Tin Pan Alley rose up in Manhattan with hundreds and hundreds and hundreds 
of songwriters turning out song after song after song," he said. They were 
bound to write Christmas songs, too." 

  "White Christmas" was one of thousands of songs Irving Berlin wrote in his 
career, Teibloom said. 

  "He wrote a song called "I Love Israel," Teibloom said. "He probably wrote a 
song for Arbor Day, too." 

  According to jewhoo.com, Jeffery Tambor, the actor who co-starred as Mayor 
May Who in the recent film "How the Grinch Stole Christmas," was asked if he 
ever worked on a project as big and expensive as the grinch film. He replied, 
"Maybe my bar mitzvah." 

  Speaking of the Grinch, remember the original animated version soundtrack 
with the great line, "He's a mean one, Mr. Grinch"? Contrary to what some might 
think, the grinch was not Jewish -- but the songwriter was (Albert Hague). 

  There are even Jewish ornaments on the Christmas tree -- Hallmark features 
one of a miniature Larry Fine of Three Stooges fame. 

  But songs are by far the biggest Jewish contribution to Christmas pop 
culture. Barbra Streisand and Kenny G. (Gorelick) have put out hugely 
successful Christmas albums. 

  Other Christmas carols written or performed by Jews include: 

  * "We Need a Little Christmas" (Jerry Herman). 

  * "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer," "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" and 
"A Holly Jolly Christmas" (Johnny Marks). 

  * "The Christmas Waltz" and "Let It Snow, Let It Snow, Let It Snow" (Sammy 
Cahn and Jule Styne). 

  * "Silver Bells" (Ray Evans, lyricist and Jay Livingston, composer). 

  * "I'm Getting' Nuttin' for Christmas" (Barry Gordon, performer). 

  So to all the Jews walking around the mall this year and getting annoyed by 
all the holiday music on the sound system: Quit blaming the Christians. 



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