Search
Close this search box.

Thursday, September 26, 2024

Search

June Lockhart Remembers ‘A Christmas Carol’

 

By Herald Staff

By Nick Thomas
Released last month on Blu-ray, the 1938 version of Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol” has long been a favorite seasonal TV movie.
“It’s a short film, only about an hour, so there was no premiere when it first came out,” recalled June Lockhart, who made her film debut at the age 13 as Belinda Cratchit in the Christmas classic. “The studio just put it out as a program filler with their feature Christmas movie for that year.”
“A Christmas Carol” is especially memorable for Lockhart because her father and mother also appear in the film.
“I thought my parents were wonderful as the Cratchits, and it was just great fun to see how a film was made,” said Lockhart. “I loved the Victorian costumes.”
Prior to filming, Lockhart was very familiar with the story.
“We used to perform it every Christmas at home for our dinner guests,” she recalled. “So I had already appeared in it, with my parents, in our living room for many years prior to doing it for MGM. We read from a script that my father had prepared from the original story. We would have wonderful actors like Doris Lloyd or Walter Kingsford playing parts and Leo G. Carroll would play Scrooge. In the film, Scrooge was played by Reginald Owen who was just a lovely, lovely man.”
Today, “A Christmas Carol” is a favorite of Lockhart’s family who are fond of quoting her first scene.
“My daughter, Junie, and granddaughter, Christianna, have never let me forget that the first words I ever spoke in movies were: ‘I know, I know – sausages!” laughed June. “It’s become a family joke and we all shriek with laughter when we watch it now. Watching the film has become a family tradition each year. And now, to be able to watch it with my grandchildren – well, who gets to do something like that?”
However, the film did leave Lockhart with one unpleasant memory.
“One thing I do remember was feeling quite nauseated on the set one day from something I had eaten the night before,” she recalled. “Then they placed a bowl of mashed parsnips in front of me during the Christmas dinner scene. The stench made me so ill, the prop man had to replace the dish with potatoes. I’ve avoided parsnips ever since!”
Lockhart went on to star in several TV series including “Lassie” and “Lost in Space.” Her father, Gene Lockhart (1891-1957), was one of Hollywood’s most recognizable character actors throughout the ‘30s and ‘40s. And her mother, Kathleen Lockhart (1895-1978), had a 26 year movie career appearing in 40 films, about half alongside her husband.
But “A Christmas Carol” was the only time June appeared on film with either of her parents.
“So it always had a sweet spot in the hearts of the Lockhart family,” she said. “It’s grand to see it on TV every year and it certainly lives on as a charming little picture.”
“A Christmas Carol” (1938) is scheduled to air on TCM Dec 25.
(Thomas teaches at Auburn University at Montgomery, Ala., and has written features, columns, and interviews for over 450 magazines and newspapers.)

Spout Off

Cape May Beach – To add to what I hope will be a published Spout regarding Senator Sinema’s comments on Kamala Harris’s desire to eliminate the filibuster in the Senate, I’d like to add Senator Manchin’s comments…

Read More

Lower Township – Cape May county residents pay close attention to who has Kamala Harris signs in front of their businesses or their homes!!! These are the businesses you want to avoid doing business with!! Anyone who…

Read More

Avalon – Jack Smith is coming for Trump with something completely foreign to him. The Truth.

Read More

Most Read

Print Editions

Recommended Articles

Skip to content