Dec. 24, 2006

The Story Of 'White Christmas'

Best-Selling Song Of Them All Grew Popular At Start Of World War II

  • Bing Crosby did the first, and perhaps most enduring, version of Irving Berlin's perennial Photo

    Bing Crosby did the first, and perhaps most enduring, version of Irving Berlin's perennial "White Christmas."  (AP)

  • Photo Essay 2006 Holiday Films

    Hollywood brings out its biggest guns and most likely Oscar contenders at this time of the year.

  • Interactive Winter Holidays

    Reasons for the season, lights, decorations, gifts, movies and more.

(CBS)  "White Christmas" is a holiday tradition beloved by millions.

It's also the most popular song, ever.

The classic was written by Irving Berlin, one of the most prolific American composers in history.

He penned more than 400 hits, among them, "Easter Parade," "No Business Like Show Business," and "God Bless America."

But, says CBS News Sunday Morning anchor Charles Osgood, "White Christmas" is his most enduring legacy.

No song, says Osgood, captures the spirit of the season better than "White Christmas."

The legendary Berlin, one of Americas greatest, was a Russian, Jewish immigrant who, though he couldn't even read or write music notation, managed to compose over 1,000 songs, the very foundation of our American songbook.

But it's "White Christmas," one of his simplest, just 54 words and 67 now classic notes, that remains his most popular.

"I think," reflected Linda Emmett, the second of Berlin's three daughters, "for my father that Christmas was an American holiday more than anything else. It was certainly nothing he was exposed to, to say the least in — in Russia."

Emmett was speaking in the former Berlin residence in New York. It is now the Luxembourg consulate.

In the Berlin household, she says, Christmas was "the typical secular Christmas, with a Christmas tree, and Christmas stockings, and a turkey, and a plum pudding, and general cheery atmosphere, and something that as children we —- we looked forward to tremendously."

Many think Berlin was inspired to write "White Christmas" during a stay in Beverly Hills while working on a movie. He was homesick for his family.

"And it wasn't until -- a couple years later … over the Christmas season of 1940 into 1941, I believe, that he -- kind of took the song, the half-finished song out of what he called his song trunk," says Jody Rosen, author of "White Christmas: the Story of an American Song."

"And," Rosen continued, "over the Christmas season that year – (Berlin) rewrote the lyric … and it was then that after he'd written it, that he came into his -- his-- song publishing offices and -- and announced to his musical secretary, 'I've just written a new song. Not only is the best song I've ever written, it's the best song anybody's ever written.' And that song was 'White Christmas.' "

"White Christmas" premiered on radio at Christmastime in 1941, just 18 days after Pearl Harbor. The song aired on Bing Crosby's radio show. Only eights months later, moviegoers would see and hear Crosby sing it in the film "Holiday Inn."

"It was … kind of the centerpiece of the film, the center," Rosen says. … "But critics didn't take much notice of it. And it was only when Armed Forces Radio began to play the song overseas and for American troops who found its images of kind of Christmas on the home front so appealing. … It was 1942, the first winter that American troops had spent overseas. So, these images of … snowy American, New Englandy Christmas really spoke to the longing, nostalgia and homesickness of the troops for their homeland and for the sweethearts and wives and mothers and fathers they'd left behind. It was the enthusiasm of these troops that really propelled the song and made it a hit."

There are now hundreds and hundreds of versions of "White Christmas," recorded by scores and scores of performers, says Osgood. Still, it is the definitive Bing Crosby rendition that makes us stop, listen, and dream along, as it has for so many Decembers.



For information on the movies "White Christmas" and "Holiday Inn," click here.

For information on "White Christmas: The Musical Tour," click here.


©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Video and Galleries from Sunday Morning

Add a Comment See all 13 Comments
by shedhouserob-2009 December 24, 2006 9:56 AM PST
Nobody can sing it like Bing!
Reply to this comment
by whsouthworth December 24, 2006 10:27 AM PST
Your editing on this piece was awful. Get rid of the terribly distracting wipes, warps and dissolves. What was it apprentice day in the editing room?
Reply to this comment
by rolko December 24, 2006 1:47 PM PST
whsouthworth, the link provided is directed to a non-CBS News website. As far as all the Java effects...welcome to the Internet!

Merry Christmas!
Reply to this comment
by fleetst December 24, 2006 4:55 PM PST
john97068: You couldn't put aside your hatefulness even on Christmas Eve? I feel sorry for you but I certainly wish you a Merry Christmas.
Reply to this comment
by elgraz December 24, 2006 5:36 PM PST
Bing was a nasty father and husband. I never would have allowed him to sing this song of love and profit from the proceeds.
Reply to this comment
by elgraz December 24, 2006 5:37 PM PST
He had a beautiful but was an ********.........oh well.
Reply to this comment
by elgraz December 24, 2006 5:53 PM PST
voice..........oh stupid CBS voice.........fix your website.......no wonder your news is always screwed up.
Reply to this comment
by elgraz December 24, 2006 5:54 PM PST
voice..........oh stupid CBS voice.........fix your website.......no wonder your news is always screwed up.
Reply to this comment
by elgraz December 24, 2006 5:55 PM PST
You must admit, he was pretty ugly with his dumbo ears..........Almost as ugly as Fred Astaire.
Reply to this comment
by elgraz December 24, 2006 5:56 PM PST
It's time to go and deliver the gifts to the Whoville kids............right.
Reply to this comment
by missamerica4 December 24, 2006 7:02 PM PST
All of you grinches.....give it for one day !
Here is a "White Christmas" you will be humming for a week.

http://www.thecompassgroup.biz/merryxmas.swf

Try it you will like it .
Reply to this comment
by louklou51 December 24, 2006 10:50 PM PST
Bing Crosby admitted his shortcomings and had a second chance at fatherhood and being a husband, give the guy his due, he did sing a great song. Merry Christmas to all and to all a good night!
Reply to this comment
by drcsanyi December 25, 2006 6:00 PM PST
One of my favorites.
But I always recall a winter day in Michigan some
30 years ago, when my friend from S. California announced he had too much of it, was going back to Orange County for Christmas. He added that he thought "May all your Christmases be white" was (Chief) "Pontiac's curse"!
Reply to this comment
See all 13 Comments
  • MOST POPULAR
  • Viewed
  • Commented
Latest News
Featured Blogs