
Claim: The character Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
was created for the Montgomery Ward group of department stores. Status: True.
But do you recall . . .
Synopsis: Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer was created
in 1939 by a copywriter named Robert L. May, who came up with a poem about a
misfit reindeer at the request of his employer, Montgomery Ward, for a
Christmas story they could use as a store promotion.
Origins: To most of us, the character of Rudolph the
Red-Nosed Reindeer -- immortalized in song and a popular TV special -- has
always been an essential part of our Christmas folklore. But Rudolph is a
decidedly twentienth-century invention whose creation can be traced to a
specific time and person.
Rudolph came to life in 1939 when the Chicago-based
Montgomery Ward company (operators of a chain of department stores) asked one
of their copywriters, 34-year-old Robert L. May, to come up with a Christmas
story they could give away to shoppers as a promotional gimmick. (The
Montgomery Ward stores had been been buying and giving away coloring books for
Christmas every year, and May's department head saw creating a giveaway booklet
of their own as a way to save money.) May, who had a penchant for writing
children's stories and limericks, was tapped to create the booklet. May,
drawing in part on the tale of The Ugly Duckling and his own background (he was
a often taunted as a child for being shy, small, and slight), settled on the idea
of an underdog ostracized by the reindeer community because of his physical
abnormality: a glowing red nose. Looking for an alliterative name, May
considered and rejected Rollo (too cheerful and carefree a name for the story
of a misfit) and Reginald (too British) before deciding on Rudolph. He then
proceeded to write Rudolph's story in verse, as a series of rhyming couplets,
testing it out on his 4-year-old daughter Barbara as he went along. Although
Barbara was thrilled with Rudolph's story, May's boss was worried that a story
featuring a red nose -- an image associated with drinking and drunkards -- was
unsuitable for a Christmas tale. May responded by taking Denver Gillen, a
friend from Montgomery Ward's art department, to the Lincoln Park Zoo to sketch
some deer. Gillen's illustrations of a red-nosed reindeer overcame the
hesitancy of May's bosses, and the Rudolph story was approved. Montgomery Ward
distributed 2.4 million copies of the Rudolph booket in 1939, and although
wartime paper shortages curtailed printing for the next several years, a total
of 6 million copies had been given by the end of 1946.
But do you recall . . . The post-war demand for
licensing the Rudolph character was tremendous, but since May had created the
story as an employee of Montgomery Ward, they held the copyright and he
received no royalties. Deeply in debt from the medical bills resulting from his
wife's terminal illness (she died about the time May created Rudolph), May
persuaded Montgomery Ward's corporate president, Sewell Avery, to turn the
copyright over to him in January 1947. With the rights to his creation in hand,
May was set to become a wealthy man. "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer"
was printed commercially in 1947 and shown in theaters as a nine-minute cartoon
the following year. The Rudolph phenomenon really took off, however, when May
talked his brother-in-law, songwriter Johnny Marks, into developing lyrics and
a melody for a Rudolph song. Marks' musical version of "Rudolph the
Red-Nosed Reindeer," recorded by Gene Autry in 1949, sold two million
copies that year and went on to become one of the best-selling songs of all
time, second only to "White Christmas." A TV special about Rudolph
narrated by Burl Ives was produced in 1964 and remains a perennially popular
holiday favorite in the USA.
May quit his copywriting job in 1951 and spent seven
years managing his creation before returning to Montgomery Ward, where he
worked until his retirement in 1971. By the time May died in 1976, his reindeer
creation had indeed made him a rich man.
It might be fitting to close this page by pointing
out that, although the story of Rudolph is primarily known to us through the
lyrics of Johnny Marks' song, the story May wrote is substantially different in
a number of ways. Rudolph was not one of Santa's reindeer (or the offspring of
one of Santa's reindeer), and he did not live at the North Pole. Rudolph lived
in an "ordinary" reindeer village elsewhere, and although he was
taunted and laughed at for having a shiny red nose, he was not regarded by his
parents as a shameful embarrassment. Rudolph was brought up in a loving
household, and he was a responsible reindeer with a good self-image and sense
of worth. Moreover, Rudolph did not rise to fame when Santa picked him out from
the reindeer herd because of his shiny nose. Santa discovered the red-nosed
reindeer quite by accident, when he noticed the glow emanating from Rudolph's
room while delivering presents to Rudolph's house. Worried that the thickening
fog -- already the cause of several accidents and delays -- will keep him from
completing his Christmas Eve rounds, Santa taps Rudolph to lead his team,
observing upon their return that "By YOU last night's journey was actually
bossed. / Without you, I'm certain we'd all have been lost!"