Three Scrooges, Part 12 (the last): Leftovers, a potpourri of Carol
adaptations and one final thought…
I was lucky to
have caught “Carol for Another Christmas” when it aired on TCM. It had only
aired once before on ABC in late December of 1964. It was a politically-charged
version of Carol starring Sterling Hayden as Scrooge (he played the police
chief Michael Corleone shot in “Godfather”).
He played the Scrooge-ish Daniel Grudge – a multi-millionaire whose son
was killed on Christmas Eve during WWII.
He was against all foreign entanglements (paraphrase: every twenty years
or so we send our boys ten thousand miles across the planet to help solve other
people’s problems”) as well as any aid to the poor and oppressed (“tell the
poor and oppressed that the hand-out box is closed for good and you’ll see less
poor and oppressed” – paraphrasing again). His son, named Marley, appears but
does not speak.
Grudge is visited
by the Ghosts of Christmas Past (played amazingly well by Steve Lawrence),
Present (Pat Hingle – I remember him as Commissioner Gordon in the 80s and 90s
Batman movies) and Yet to Come (played by Robert Shaw, who as usual steals
every scene he is in).
Directed by
Joseph Mankiewicz, it was his only television work, and written with Rod
Serling’s usual heavy hand; the movie is a 90-minute lecture against
isolationism. In a post-apocalyptic future, Grudge’s Butler Charles was put on
trial for “treasonous Involvement” by Imperial Me (played with sinister glee by
Peter Sellers).
Probably the rarest
“Christmas Carol” adaptation of all! And no wonder – it was hard to sit through
even with the objective eye of looking at rare television. In today’s
politically charged air it is almost unwatchable.
***
“Bah, Humbug! The
Story of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol” from 1994, This was a dramatic
reading based on Dickens’ own scripts ala Patrick Stewart’s one-man shows. This
was performed at the Pierpont Morgan Library in New York . Ironically
named after JP Morgan – the very embodiment of Scrooge later in the century.
Robert MacNeil
introduced the reading. James Earl Jones performed all of Scrooge’s lines and
Sheen all others. Very commendable job by both actors – I think both would make
great Scrooges in their own productions. I chanced upon this on PBS one
afternoon and had not seen it since.
***
Laurence
Olivier’s reading of “A Christmas Carol” aired on the radio in the early 1950s.
It is not a reading – the consummate actor plays every part except the ladies
(Mrs. Cratchet) and Tiny Tim. Echo chambers are used for the ghosts.
Scrooge is played
straight, but the ghosts, particularly the Ghost of Christmas Past, bring out
the old ham in Lord Olivier…
It lasts 30
minutes and races through the story. Nothing is added and much omitted
(youthful Scrooge, Belle, Fred’s party, etc.), but it’s Laurence Olivier! A
good, quick listen. Available on CD, I
found it on YouTube.
***
Thought of the
blog: So whatever happened to Tiny Tim. I have a theory; stay with me here.
Despite his
salvation, Scrooge likely had about ten years left to live. During that time,
his financial support nursed Tim to health. Tim’s gentle nature and history led
him to wish to work with children or even aspire to be a physician. His second father would have encouraged it.
Unfortunately,
when Scrooge died, all his estate would have gone to Fred. Scrooge would have
made some provision for the Cratchets, which makes sense. But Bob isn’t known
for his financial acuity. Likely by the time Tim comes of age the money is long
gone to establish Peter and provide dowries for his sisters.
Tim takes his
fate with stoic grace and takes a job at a local clerk or shopkeeper.
By the 1870s Tim
will have lost his parents. The charitable giving of Fred has likely stopped –
he supported the Cratchets but now it is their descendents and extended family.
Fred helps when asked, but not to his detriment. Fred has a kind soul, but
money only goes so far. Tim hears that a lot lately, especially from Peter and
his brothers-in-law.
Tim is alone. He
remains unmarried – potential brides are put off by his poverty and his
physical condition. Although cured, he
still walks with a cane and his hand is still withered. The local east-end
streetwalkers have sympathy on his sweet nature and offer him solace. “I do
declare, there were times when I was so lonesome I took some comfort
there.”
That is how he
caught syphilis.
Tim was nearly
fifty when the last stages of the STD rampaged through his system – a system
still weak from the malady of his youth. Like his second father, a cold
bitterness set in. Added to his coldness came the mental imbalance from the
STD.
At least Scrooge
had the solace of being a “good man of business” and sat on a sufficient,
albeit unused, accumulation of wealth. Tim had no such solace. His financial
future was taken by his many sisters four decades ago, just as his health was
taken by fallen women. What does his Bible, his only refuge, say? “…the men of
her city shall stone her to death because she has committed an act of
folly in Israel by playing the
harlot in her father's house; thus you shall purge the evil from among
you. “
His father’s
house is gone. His second father’s house is gone. All that are left are the
harlots…
Purge the evil,
he thinks, yes, they must die. This is why in the late 1880s, Tiny Tim, his
senses marred and warped by his bitterness and disease, committed some of the
most heinous crimes still reviewed and examined to this day.
Thus, it is my
belief that Tim Cratchet was, in fact, Jack the Ripper.
Copyright 2012
Michael G. Curry