NEW YORK — As the Christmas fixture that sold out its initial printing in five days and has since been retold in more than 100 film adaptations celebrates its 180th anniversary this month, one New York museum is paying homage to the novella and its penman.
To give visitors a new peek into Charles Dickens' process, the Morgan Library & Museum exhibits the original manuscript of "A Christmas Carol" each holiday season and turns a new page in it, just as Ebenezer Scrooge turns over a new leaf every 25th of December.
Perusing the open manuscript, visitors can see him writing and correcting, using his goose quill to cross out sections and change words to make the setting more evocative, to punch up the prose. Philip Palmer, literary curator at the Morgan, notes that Dickens rarely altered the dialogue in the manuscript but finessed the lines that set up the scenes.
What you see when looking at the manuscript — or at the Morgan's book "A Christmas Carol: The Original Manuscript Edition," which presents the original page on the left and a typeset version on the right — is the writer at work.
"There are no other notes or documents that tell us how he wrote this book, in part because he wrote it so fast, he didn't have time to take notes and write out the manuscript once and then copy it somewhere else," Palmer said.
The beloved tale has taken stage in the form of productions and staged readings across the country, from New York to California and all stops in between. Audiences arrive knowing the first line ("Marley was dead, to begin with") and the last ("God bless Us, Every One"). They know every plot twist, every ghost. Some know every line, and when an adaptation has altered it from the original. Its hold remains.
Tony-winning actor Jefferson Mays, whose one-man adaptation was a critic's pick on Broadway last December, is sure that the first time he heard it — read by his parents — inspired him to be an actor.
Actor Paul Carlin, who wrote an adaptation and played Scrooge at the Maltz Jupiter Theatre in Florida this month, calls Dickens' work a sort of "backdoor brilliance" that sneaks up on its audience.
Elliott Forrest, an award-winning producer and director whose radio-play adaptation was a gift for New York Public Radio's audience more than a decade ago, brought that version to the stage in Louisville this month, accompanied by the Louisville Orchestra.
Palmer recounts the story behind the writing of "A Christmas Carol," from Dickens' crippling finances to the stunning success of the literary triumph.
It is October 1843 and Dickens’ debts are mounting. The 31-year-old author has moved his growing family into a new home in London, a bigger house with more servants. His father and his brothers keep taking out loans using his famous name. He is forced to take out ads in newspapers warning creditors not to loan his father any more money.
By 1843, Dickens was already known for “The Pickwick Papers," “Oliver Twist,” “Nicholas Nickleby,” and “The Old Curiosity Shop.” But his latest work, “The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit,” serialized in magazines, isn’t the barn-burner he’d hoped.
He devises what he calls “a little scheme” to right his financial ship and earn him what he hopes will be £1,000. He’ll write a ghost story for Christmas. But he’ll have to work fast. It’s nearly Halloween. He cancels social engagements, instead seeking inspiration on long nighttime walks through London. Walking by night, writing by day, the novella emerges.
In just six weeks, Dickens crafts the story of Scrooge, a “covetous old sinner” who is visited on Christmas Eve by the ghost of his seven-years-dead partner Jacob Marley.
Tormented and chained in the afterlife by the errors of his worldly business ways, Marley secures a chance to help Scrooge escape the same fate: he is to be visited by the ghosts of Christmas Past, Christmas Present and Christmas Yet to Come. The spirits show Scrooge where he turned away from humanity and the common good. He stifles his “Bah! Humbug!” reflex and vows “to honor Christmas in my heart, and try to keep it all the year.”
"A Christmas Carol" was published 180 years ago this year, on Dec. 19, 1843, and sold all 6,000 copies of its initial printing in five days, Palmer says. It introduced the world to Scrooge, his faithful clerk Bob Cratchit and his crippled boy, Tiny Tim, to Scrooge's boyhood employer, Fezziwig, and Scrooge's nephew, Fred. And Marley.
Forrest counsels his casts — which have included Scrooges as varied as David Hyde Pierce, F. Murray Abraham and Kathleen Turner — to never forget the three H's of "A Christmas Carol": heart, humor and horror.
"A Christmas Carol" is a redemption story that has been retold in more than 100 film adaptations and countless stage productions, radio dramas and staged readings. It has been assayed by Muppets and Mr. Magoo. Theaters have been kept afloat with the guaranteed audiences "A Christmas Carol" promises, just as another holiday chestnut, "The Nutcracker," permits ballet companies to see another summer.
Last Christmas, Mays played 50 characters, from Scrooge down to a potato bubbling against a pot lid, in his one-man "A Christmas Carol" on Broadway, an adaptation he wrote with his wife, Susan Lyons, and director Michael Arden.
"It truly is magical. It has to be the most adapted piece of literature in the history of literature," Mays said. "But it's so many different kinds of stories wrapped up into one. I think that's one of the sources of its appeal. It's a fantastic phantasmagorical ghost story. It's a sort of moral Cinderella story of transformation and redemption. It's a novella about a whopping midlife crisis. It's a cracking good yarn that has had this universal appeal."
The story is suited to the stage, Mays said, because that's how Dickens wrote it.
"His daughter, Mamie, would sit in his study sometimes to watch him in the act of writing," Mays says. "She described him leaping up from his desk, running to a full-length mirror and gesticulating wildly, speaking in all sorts of different funny voices, assuming different shapes, and then rush back to his desk and sit down and put it on paper. He was very much an actor. This is why it's so often adapted for the theater, because it is so theatrical."
Mays says he loves reading it aloud to an audience, as Dickens did on tours of the United Kingdom and America.
"It was the first of his works that he ever performed in front of an audience, and it was the last of his works that he performed just a few months before his death in 1870," Mays says. "He loved that feeling, that contact with a live audience."
Mays' connection to the story goes back to his childhood home in Connecticut, when his parents read it aloud to him.
"I'll never forget that evening in the 1970s, my father's somewhat detached, lilting narrative voice. And then my mother, who would completely be possessed by every character she read. She was Marley's Ghost, she was little Fan, she was Belle, she was Scrooge, she was the Ghost of Christmas present, she was Bob Cratchit.
"To see this woman that I thought I knew so well transformed before my eyes into these completely other characters scared me to death and compelled me," Mays said. "I think it's what made me want to be an actor. I said, 'I want to do that, too.' But I never forget that moment. We read it every year, part of my personal history. It is my story. And I think people have that magical relationship with this."
The Morgan displays the bound hand-written manuscript — which was presented to Dickens' friend and creditor Thomas Mitton in early December 1843, after the first edition was at the printer's — in a glass cube in the imposing study of J. Pierpont Morgan, a room that is built to intimidate.
(It's not lost on Palmer that the novella ended up with Morgan, one of the world's most famous bankers, who bought it before 1900.)
But the simple novella has a power all its own, one whose message prompted some American bosses to give their workers Christmas Day off years before it became a federal holiday in 1870.
"It has a lighthearted feel to it that immediately makes us think of Christmas and puts a smile on our faces, but it also has this real serious side to it," Palmer said. "Charles Dickens saw it as a sledgehammer blow, as something that could actually do more than maybe legislation or political pamphlets or nonfiction writing, but rather a fable, a lie that can tell the truth even more poignantly than the truth itself. Dickens saw that in the book. And I think we still see that in the book today."
There were changes along the way, some of which are in the manuscript, some of which were made when Dickens looked over the printer's proofs. Palmer shared three:
Carlin says the genius of Dickens' text is how accessible it is but how its message demands attention. He put it in actors' terms, invoking two wildly different playwrights, a popular just-for-laughs American and a society-challenging German.
"He's like Neil Simon connected with (Bertolt) Brecht," Carlin says, laughing. "It's like, how do you do that?"
Forrest said Dickens goes deep.
"He was about 30 years or so ahead of Freud and the idea that there is redemption in revisiting childhood traumas, which is what those ghosts do, they take him back to a romantic breakup," Forrest says. "He's not mad at Fred because he's just a Grinch. He's mad at Fred because Scrooge's only sister died at childbirth and he still blames his nephew for that. There's all this trauma that Scrooge revisits and has real redemption, has a real breakthrough.
"I think there's something inherent in that, that we can all change, that we can be better people, that we can learn from what either we put ourselves through or what other people put us through," he says.
The story, Forrest says, comes together when Scrooge articulates that transformation: “I will live in the Past, the Present and the Future. The Spirits of all three shall strive within me.”
Dickens sought to relive that heady best-seller Christmas of 1843, publishing a Christmas book every year for the next five years.
“None of them were ever as good as 'A Christmas Carol,' but they all made a ton of money," Palmer says. "They made more money than 'A Christmas Carol,' because by that point, everyone wanted the latest Charles Dickens Christmas book.”
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