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Fred Gailey: “Look Doris, someday you’re going to find that your way of facing this realistic world just doesn’t work. And when you do, don’t overlook those lovely intangibles. You’ll discover those are the only things that are worthwhile.”Santa and the little girl sing a song together: Sinterklaas Kapoentje (Saint Nicholas, little rascal), put something in my little shoe, put something in my little boot, thank you Sinterklaasje. Sinterklaas Kapoentje, put something in my little shoe, put something in my little boot, thank you Sinterklaasje.The last line of the film is from defense attorney Fred Gailey, who sees Kris’s cane in the Dream Home and says, on his winning the case for him, “Maybe I didn’t do such a wonderful thing after all.” Note that he does not use “amazing,” but “wonderful.” Hence, the line can be read in one of two ways: a) He realizes

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mrs. shellhammer gets hammered. miracle on 34th st.

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Hello! | Miracle on 34th street, Classic hollywood, Vintage film

Nov 27, 2015 – Clip from “Miracle on 34th Street”. Mrs. Shellhammer answers the phone after a couple of triple martinis.

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Miracle on 34th Street | Summary, Cast, & Facts | Britannica

Miracle on 34th Street, American comedy film, released in 1947, that became a perennial family favourite at Christmastime.

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  • Date Published: 2011. 12. 15.
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What is the famous line from Miracle on 34th Street?

Fred Gailey: “Look Doris, someday you’re going to find that your way of facing this realistic world just doesn’t work. And when you do, don’t overlook those lovely intangibles. You’ll discover those are the only things that are worthwhile.”

What does the little Dutch girl say in Miracle on 34th Street?

Santa and the little girl sing a song together: Sinterklaas Kapoentje (Saint Nicholas, little rascal), put something in my little shoe, put something in my little boot, thank you Sinterklaasje. Sinterklaas Kapoentje, put something in my little shoe, put something in my little boot, thank you Sinterklaasje.

What does the last line of Miracle on 34th Street mean?

The last line of the film is from defense attorney Fred Gailey, who sees Kris’s cane in the Dream Home and says, on his winning the case for him, “Maybe I didn’t do such a wonderful thing after all.” Note that he does not use “amazing,” but “wonderful.” Hence, the line can be read in one of two ways: a) He realizes

Are there 2 Miracle on 34th Street?

Miracle on 34th Street is a 1959 made-for-TV movie. It is a remake of the 1947 film of the same name and was the only version not to be released by 20th Century Fox.

How many Miracle on 34th St movies are there?

How many Miracle on 34th Street movies are there? There are two feature film versions of Miracle on 34th Street—the 1947 original and the 1994 remake. There are also three television versions, airing in 1955, 1959, and 1973.

Who directed Miracle on 34th Street?

Who was the deaf girl in Miracle on 34th Street?

Samantha Krieger is an actress, known for Miracle on 34th Street (1994).

Who is the little girl on Miracle on 34th Street?

Edmund Gwenn and Natalie Wood in Miracle on 34th Street (1947). Natalie Wood portrayed Susan Walker, a precocious little girl whose well-meaning mother (played by Maureen O’Hara) has raised her not to believe in Santa Claus.

Is Kris Kringle really Santa in Miracle on 34th Street?

Like we knew he would all along because, hey, Miracle on 34th Street is a Christmas movie after all, the judge ultimately rules that Santa Claus is real and that Kris Kringle is him.

Who played the drunk Santa in Miracle on 34th Street?

Miracle on 34th Street (1947) – Percy Helton as Drunken Santa Claus – IMDb.

Which version of Miracle on 34th Street is better?

But with a well-rounded, memorable supporting cast, and a story that balances the fantastical with the mundane as well as being dramatically engaging, natural, and satisfying, the original 1947 Miracle on 34th Street deserves the title of the best version of the story. It’s a Christmas classic for a reason.

Is Miracle on 34th St on Netflix?

Netflix may not have this holiday classic in its library, but HBO Max and Hulu sure do! That’s right, you can stream the movie online free on HBO Max with a subscription as well as Hulu with a premium subscription.

Where can I watch the 1947 version of Miracle on 34th Street?

Watch Miracle on 34th Street Streaming Online | Hulu (Free Trial)

Did Mr Macy play himself in Miracle on 34th Street?

Miracle on 34th Street (1947) – Harry Antrim as Mr. R.H. Macy – IMDb.

Was Miracle on 34th Street filmed in Macy’s?

The scenes at Macy’s were shot on location at the real Macy’s Department Store on 34th Street. During filming, it turned out that the film crew required more electricity than the store could provide, so additional power sources had to be set up in the Macy’s basement.

What year was the original Miracle on 34th Street made?

In 1947, Miracle on 34th Street made the world believe in Santa Claus (we bet even skeptics warmed to the holiday magic a little more that year).

The Top 14 ‘Miracle on 34th Street’ Quotes

Do you remember the most memorable quotes from “Miracle on 34th Street?” If you grew up watching this feel-good 1947 Christmas classic, as many people did, you no doubt have retained the basic plotline of the film. Or, you may be familiar with the 1994 theatrical remake.

Edmund Gwenn stars as Kris Kringle—the benevolent Santa Claus. Christmas time, however, has become a commercial racket where shoppers try to get the best deals and stores outdo each other in attracting consumers. This movie spins that a bit and brings a whole lot of fun and entertainment.

Over time, the most touching lines in the film may have escaped your memory, unless you’re a particularly die-hard fan. Relive the film, and your childhood, with these “Miracle on 34th Street” quotes.

Faith, Commercialism, and Santa on 34th Street

Kris Kringle: “Oh, Christmas isn’t just a day, it’s a frame of mind…and that’s what’s been changing. That’s why I’m glad I’m here, maybe I can do something about it.”

Fred Gailey: “Look Doris, someday you’re going to find that your way of facing this realistic world just doesn’t work. And when you do, don’t overlook those lovely intangibles. You’ll discover those are the only things that are worthwhile.”

Susan Walker: “I believe…I believe…. It’s silly, but I believe.”

Susan Walker: “If you’re really Santa Claus, you can get it for me. And if you can’t, you’re only a nice man with a white beard, like mother says.”

Fred Gailey: “All my life I’ve wondered something, and now’s my chance to find out. I’m going to find the answer to a question that’s puzzled the world for centuries. Does Santa Claus sleep with his whiskers outside or in?

Kris Kringle: “Now wait a minute, Susie. Just because every child can’t get his wish that doesn’t mean there isn’t a Santa Claus.”

Susan Walker: “You mean it’s like, “If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.”

Kris Kringle: “To market, to market, to buy a fat pig! Home again, home again, jiggety-jig. To market, to market, to buy a fat hog! Home again, home again, jiggety…”

Doris Walker: “Faith is believing in things when common sense tells you not to.”

Doris Walker: “Susan, I speak French, but that does not make me Joan of Arc.”

Doris Walker: “And by filling them full of fairy tales they grow up considering life a fantasy instead of reality.”

Mr. Shellhammer: “I just know that with that man on the throne my department will sell more toys than it ever has. I just feel it.”

Alfred: “There is a lot of bad ‘isms’ floating around this world and one of the worst is commercialism.”

Charles Halloran: “All right, you go back and tell them that the New York State Supreme Court rules there’s no Santa Claus. It’s all over the papers. The kids read it and they don’t hang up their stockings.

Revisiting a classic scene from Miracle on 34th Street

The original 1947 production of Miracle on 34th Street, as holiday movies rate, is rivaled only by 1946’s It’s a Wonderful Life. Both delve into the magic of Christmas, Miracle with an undertaking by a man claiming to be Santa Claus to convince two skeptics of his claim by making wishes come true with the help of a lawyer and the United States post office, Wonderful Life with its hard-working dreamer at a low moment in his life having his life turned upside down by an angel who shows him how important he is to those around him, A Christmas Carol style.

In November 1986, Miracle on 34th Street became the first movie shown on television in a colorized format. It is still broadcast each December in both black and white and colorized, and despite most colorization in film detracting from a movie, I think this is one work where colorization reveals details you might not notice otherwise. Written and directed by George Seaton, Miracle on 34th Street has one key scene, a turning point, that is so well-directed and performed that it may be one of the best scenes, and certainly one of the most classic, ever committed to film.

Our favorite actor to play Santa Claus, Edmund Gwenn, immerses himself in his role as a man named Kris Kringle who leaves an old folks’ home to take on the part as a Macy’s store Santa Claus after he witnesses a drunk man playing the part. Gwenn shows Santa as he should be shown, a right-jolly old fellow, pure in spirit, with a love for everyone. He is hired at Macy’s by Doris Walker, played by the beautiful and wonderful actress Maureen O’Hara, in one of her most challenging roles to watch. The audience is naturally inclined to like Walker because the well-liked actress O’Hara is behind the role, yet it is difficult because she steadfastly prevents her daughter Susan, played by a young Natalie Wood, from taking part in a typical childhood experience–no make-believe, no fairy tales–all seriousness. And certainly Doris will not allow her daughter to believe that Santa Claus exists, or that this man whose employee ID lists his name as Kris Kringle, could possibly be the Santa.

The key scene begins after a new neighbor of the Walkers, a lawyer named Fred Gailey, played by John Payne, is left to watch young Susan and deliver her to her mother at Macy’s. Fred truly likes Susan and her mother, and attempting to gain the affection of both, he takes Susan to meet Santa Claus, just like most children in America have done for decades. In Susan’s visit she explains to Santa that she knows he isn’t real and that her mother hired him. He asks her what she wants for Christmas and she says her mother will provide anything she might need. He acknowledges her as a non-believer. Even a pull of his beard, revealing it is not a fake beard, does little to persuade the young skeptic. Doris intercedes with Susan’s visit, scolding Fred for filling Susan’s head full of make-believe ideas. While this is happening, Susan–serious and curious–sneaks back behind a door to watch other children greeting Santa–maybe that real beard sparked something–and the key scene begins.

A woman and her daughter are next in line to visit Santa. The woman, played by Mary Field, appears hesitant, the girl, played by 8-year-old Marlene Lyden, a little sad.

Before the girl climbs into Santa’s lap, the mother reveals that the girl is Dutch and was an orphan she recently adopted.

Susan Walker watches the conversation unfold from a hallway.

Santa Claus immediately speaks to the Dutch girl with a warm smile… in the girl’s native language, saying “Hello, I’m glad you came.”

The little girl lights up, and her sincerity beams through. The rest of their conversation is in Dutch. Here is their exchange translated:

Girl: Ooh you ARE Sinterklaas!

She jumps into Santa’s lap.

Santa: Well, yes of course!

Girl: I knew, I knew for sure you would understand.

Santa: Of course, tell me what you’d like.

The camera switches to Susan Walker, and something clicks for her. Her jaw drops. Although she doesn’t speak, her expression asks: Is he really Santa Claus? The conversation continues, with the girl answering Mr. Kringle’s question.

Girl: Nothing! I already have everything. I just want to stay with this lovely lady.

Her mother is visibly touched.

Santa: Would you like to sing for me?

Santa and the little girl sing a song together:

Sinterklaas Kapoentje (Saint Nicholas, little rascal),

put something in my little shoe,

put something in my little boot,

thank you Sinterklaasje.

Sinterklaas Kapoentje,

put something in my little shoe,

put something in my little boot,

thank you Sinterklaasje.

The scene fades into the next, a conversation where Susan tries to convince her mother that Mr. Kringle really may be Santa Claus. Count one skeptic down, one to go, for Mr. Kringle.

Here is a cut of the scene on YouTube.*

…but if you haven’t watched the full movie, get a copy and watch it in black and white or color. It’s brilliant either way, and a must to re-watch every Christmas.

Have a happy Christmas from the staff at borg.com!

C.J. Bunce / Editor / borg

*2022 Update: It’s been ten (!) years since I wrote this and it’s one of borg reader’s favorites. From time to time the clip is removed from YouTube. Please drop me a comment if you ever see it not playing at the above link!

Miracle on 34th Street / WMG

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/WMG/MiracleOnThirtyFourthStreet

This heart-warming children’s movie is an incredibly cynical attack on societal pressure.

Nothing in the movie is supernatural. Kris has to ask Susan what she wants for Christmas; he only gets out of the sanitarium because of purely mundane events; and even the house at the end is only for sale, not bought and paid for. To quote Futurama: When you do things right, people won’t be sure you’ve done anything at all.

Everything that happens to exonerate Kris is not only mundane, but paints the justice system as ineffective and biased. The judge who agrees to take the case only does so because his friend points out that he will not be re-elected if he puts “Santa Claus” in the looney bin. The only reason the State of New York admits the existence of Santa Claus is because the prosecutor doesn’t want to admit to his son that he lied to him. Were he single, the case would have gone in a very different direction. The letters from the Post Office that exonerate Kris are sent purely because the workers are lazy and want to get them off their hands. This “evidence” is accepted because the judge doesn’t want to be made a fool of. These are the same acts of enlightened self-interest that get the lady what she wants in The Song of Bernadette. The civil authorities don’t believe for a minute that the lady exists, but it becomes politically or personally inconvenient for them to deny her requests, or works to their advantage if they grant them.

Advertisement: In the end, Susan’s Dream Home is “For Sale,” and Kris knows where to send them. The owners are mysteriously missing. So, either he is Santa Claus and brought the house into existence—or he’s a wack-job and he murdered the owners so that the girl he’s obsessed with associates him with a happy event. Or he could have had access to the real-estate classifieds while in Bellevue awaiting trial. He didn’t need to bring the house into existence. He’s been delivering toys there for years. It’s hardly a unique design, he just sent them to the nearest one that was for sale. The house was already for sale likely at the beginning of the story. Susan shows Kris the real estate classifieds in the paper, so Kris didn’t bring his house into existence. It already existed and was on the market. Kris just made sure that Fred, Doris, and Susan would drive right past it and Doris and Fred were convinced to buy the house. Susan is a seven-year-old girl. Despite Mom’s hard dose of reality, she probably didn’t realize that the dream house already existed and thought that Kris conjured it out of thin air. Since she got the picture of the house out of the real estate section, she knew it was real and that Kris had not magicked it up. 1) Kris told Fred to drive that way 2) there was the house, still for sale. These things told her that Kris had located the house for Fred to buy.

The last line of the film is from defense attorney Fred Gailey, who sees Kris’s cane in the Dream Home and says, on his winning the case for him, “Maybe I didn’t do such a wonderful thing after all.” Note that he does not use “amazing,” but “wonderful.” Hence, the line can be read in one of two ways: a) He realizes that Kris is Santa, and Mr. Gailey didn’t have to be a great lawyer to show the truth, or b) He realizes that they just let a dangerous, deluded pedophile out on the streets and that Kris is obsessed with young Susan, to the point that he’s willing to buy (or kill for) Susan’s Dream Home. Advertisement: Or maybe he just realized he’s now going to have to shill out more than just a few pennies in order to finish making Susan’s dream come true. Or Fred is concerned that Kris has decided to move in with the family permanently.

In the 1994 version, Kris befriends a reindeer in a paddock in central park and clearly suggests it is one of “his” reindeer. But why would his reindeer be stuck in the central park zoo?

So you think that, in Miracle on 34th Street, Kris Kringle is actually Santa Claus, and exonerated — or at least a harmless old man who deserves his delusion? Nothing could be further from the truth.The proof:

The lead of this film is Santa Claus

I thought everyone knew that!

Every December 24th, we leave out milk and cookies for Edmund Gwenn.

Kris Kringle is a Time Lord

The Kris Kringle of the 1994 remake is the Curator, revisiting the Sixth Doctor.

There is something very Colin Baker-like about Sir Richard Attenborough’s voice, so it’s fun to imagine that he’s an older Doctor revisiting an earlier face but fudging on some of the details.

Kris Kringle is neither insane nor Santa Claus.

Kris Kringle is just a very rich old man with a lot of free time on his hands, who every Christmas goes around pretending to be Santa to try to bring a little magic back in Christmas by doing seemingly miraculous things that he has prepared for well in advance. And he’s so convicted to keeping the magic alive that he refuses to admit he’s not Santa Claus, even though not doing so could result in being committed.

Kris is grooming Alfred to be the next Santa Claus.

Kris is aware of his mortality and is concerned that his anti-commercialism message will be lost without someone to carry it forward. He asks a few gently-pointed questions to Alfred to judge his sincerity, and chooses him to carry the torch when he passes on.

Miracle on 34th Street | Summary, Cast, & Facts

Miracle on 34th Street, American comedy film, released in 1947, that became a perennial family favourite at Christmastime.

Edmund Gwenn and Natalie Wood in Miracle on 34th Street Edmund Gwenn and Natalie Wood in Miracle on 34th Street (1947). Courtesy of Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation

Natalie Wood portrayed Susan Walker, a precocious little girl whose well-meaning mother (played by Maureen O’Hara) has raised her not to believe in Santa Claus. When their lives intersect with that of Kris Kringle (Edmund Gwenn), an elderly man hired to play Santa at New York City’s famous Macy’s department store, Susan begins to suspect he may be the real St. Nick. After a jealous fellow employee frames him for an assault, Kringle is placed in a mental hospital. At the ensuing sanity hearing, Kringle and his attorney attempt to prove that he is indeed Santa Claus.

Britannica Quiz Famous Hollywood Film Characters Quiz How much of a movie buff are you? In this quiz you’ll be shown a character’s name, and you’ll need to pick the film in which that character appears.

Although the movie was released in the summer, it became a box-office hit and ran in theatres through the holiday season. Its legacy is such that it is regularly aired on television right after Macy’s annual Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City, and the store has frequently decorated its windows during the Christmas season with displays based on the film. The popularity of Miracle on 34th Street is due in part to the perfomances of Gwenn, who won an Academy Award, and Wood. The story inspired several remakes, including a big-screen version released in 1994 that starred Richard Attenborough in the Kris Kringle role.

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