You're in Love, Charlie Brown
You're in Love, Charlie Brown is the fourth prime-time animated television special based upon the comic strip Peanuts, by Charles M. Schulz. It originally aired on CBS on June 12, 1967.[1] This was the second non-holiday-oriented Peanuts special, following Charlie Brown's All-Stars.[2]
You're In Love, Charlie Brown | |
---|---|
Also known as | You Love Her, Charlie Brown by Charles M. Schulz |
Genre | Animated television special |
Created by | Charles M. Schulz |
Directed by | Bill Melendez |
Voices of | Peter Robbins Sally Dryer Christopher Shea Cathy Steinberg Gabrielle DeFaria Ritter Anne Altieri |
Theme music composer | Vince Guaraldi |
Opening theme | "You're in Love, Charlie Brown" |
Ending theme | "You're in Love, Charlie Brown" |
Composer(s) | Vince Guaraldi |
Country of origin | U.S. |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Lee Mendelson |
Editor(s) | Robert T. Gillis |
Camera setup | Nick Vasu |
Running time | 25:20 |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Picture format | 4:3 |
Audio format | Monaural |
First shown in | June 12, 1967 |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown (1966) |
Followed by | He's Your Dog, Charlie Brown (1968) |
Both You're in Love, Charlie Brown and He's Your Dog, Charlie Brown were nominated for an Emmy award for Outstanding Achievement in Children's Programming in 1968.[3]
Plot
It is late spring and school is about to let out for summer vacation, but Charlie Brown is upset about everything, mostly due to feeling disliked and ostracized by his schoolmates. On the way to school, he meets Linus and tells him he is frustrated that he cannot enjoy himself like all the other kids at school (and Charlie Brown cannot enjoy lunchtime). When he notices the Little Red-Haired Girl sitting on a passing bus, Linus immediately realizes that Charlie Brown is in love. Sally appears and is in love with Linus as usual.
During the next-to-last day of school, Charlie Brown agonizes over the Little Red-Haired Girl, trying to think of different ways to get her attention, only to have each attempt fail embarrassingly. First he writes her a love note, but he gets called on by the teacher to read a report in front of the class, and accidentally reads the note aloud to the raucous laughter of the class. Then he goes to the pencil sharpener and accidentally sharpens his ball point pen. Lunch hour is just as frustrating. He tries to get up the courage to go and talk to the girl, only to fail at the last moment. Then he panics when the Little Red-Haired Girl approaches, tying his peanut butter sandwich in a knot and pulling his lunch sack down over his face. On the way home, Lucy and Violet jeer at Charlie Brown for a ridiculous answer he gave in class. Linus defends him by revealing that he loves the Little Red-Haired Girl, but this only gives the girls another way to humiliate Charlie Brown. At home Charlie Brown finds out that his sister is wearing her graduation clothes and Sally tells Charlie Brown that she is graduating kindergarten and is going to the 1st grade.
That afternoon, Charlie Brown goes over to Lucy's psychiatry booth, but Lucy, already upset over Schroeder ignoring her after she breaks his piano and Beethoven, is not much help. Later, he meets Peppermint Patty and talks about the girl at school, but before he can mention her red hair, Patty jumps in and tells Chuck that she will set up a meeting with her. Patty then tells Lucy that "someone" wants to meet her at the ball park that night. Lucy agrees, thinking the "someone" is Schroeder, and Patty returns to tell Charlie Brown everything is all set. When the two meet each other at home plate, they both respond with "You! Bleah!"
The next morning, the last day of school before summer vacation, Charlie Brown plans to get up at 4:30 a.m. and meet the Little Red-Haired Girl at the bus stop. However, Charlie Brown falls asleep on the bench, and when the bus comes, it leaves him behind. He arrives late at school and is sent to the principal's office right after yelling at the teacher when asked why he was late. When he comes back to class, the teacher calls on him to solve a math problem on the blackboard. Thinking he will finally impress the Little Red-Haired Girl, he struts to the blackboard and works hard, writing college geometry formulas, but when the teacher asks him if he knows what he is doing, he admits he doesn't have a clue. He is once again laughed at, and once again goes back to his desk.
At noon school is finally over, and determined to finally meet the Little Red-Haired Girl, Charlie Brown beats everyone out to the school bus to meet her, but a clamoring crowd of fellow students pushes him away. The last student gets on the bus, and it pulls away again, leaving Charlie Brown behind. He shouts out his misery until he notices a sheet of paper that had gotten slipped into his hand. It reads:
- I Like You, Charlie Brown. signed Little Red Haired Girl
Charlie Brown's anguish quickly turns into delight and hope as he dances up the hill toward home, saying he cannot wait until September during the closing credits.
In the post credits scene, Charlie Brown stops and asks himself, "Good grief! How will I live until September?" (though it is never revealed if Charlie Brown actually loved the Little Red Haired Girl in the first place).
Voice cast
- Peter Robbins - Charlie Brown
- Sally Dryer - Lucy van Pelt
- Christopher Shea - Linus van Pelt
- Gabrielle DeFaria Ritter - Peppermint Patty
- Ann Altieri - Violet
- Kathy Steinberg - Sally Brown
- Bill Melendez - Snoopy
3 and 4, Frieda, Patty, Pig-Pen, Schroeder, and Shermy appear, but are silent.
Credits
- Created and Written by: Charles M. Schulz
- Produced and Directed by: Bill Melendez
- Executive Producer: Lee Mendelson
- Original Score Composed and Performed by: Vince Guaraldi
- Arranged and Conducted by: John Scott Trotter
- Graphic Blandishment by: Ed Levitt, Bernard Gruver, Frank Smith, Ruth Kissane, Dean Spille, Rudy Zamora, Beverly Robbins, Bob Carlson, Eleanor Warren, Frank Braxton, Faith Kovaleski, John Walker, Flora Hastings, Russ Von Neida, Gwenn Dotzler
- Voices Directed by: Dick Beals
- West Hillsborough School Choir Directed by: Al Clover
- Editing: Robert T. Gillis
- Assisted by: Steven Melendez
- Sound by: Producers' Sound Service
- Camera: Nick Vasu
- A Lee Mendelson-Bill Melendez Production
- In Cooperation with United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
- THE END
"You're in Love, Charlie Brown"
© 1967 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Music score
The music score for You're in Love, Charlie Brown was composed by Vince Guaraldi (except where noted) and conducted and arranged by John Scott Trotter.[4] The score was recorded by the Vince Guaraldi Sextet on May 17, 1967, at United Western Recorders, featuring Frank Rosolino (trombone), John Gray (guitar), Ronald Lang (woodwinds), Monty Budwig (bass) and John Rae (drums).[5]
- "It's Spring"/"Charlie Brown Theme" (version 1) (Vince Guaraldi, Lee Mendelson)
- "You're in Love, Charlie Brown" (version 1, piano)
- "You're in Love, Charlie Brown" (version 2, vocal)
- "School Days" (version 1, piano) (Will D. Cobb, Gus Edwards)
- "Red Baron"
- "Trio Ad-Lib"
- "Psychiatric Vamp" (version 1)
- "I Before E Except After C"
- "Love Will Come"
- "You're in Love, Charlie Brown" (version 3, minor key)
- "You're in Love, Charlie Brown" (version 4, theme parody vocal)
- "You're in Love, Charlie Brown" (version 5, piano + flute)
- "Pomp and Circumstance March: No. 1 in D" (Sir Edward Elgar)
- "Psychiatric Vamp" (version 2)
- "Schroeder Practices"
- "Schroeder Plays"
- "Psychiatric Vamp" (version 3)
- "Peppermint Patty" (piano + horns)
- "Psychiatric Vamp" (version 4)
- "You're in Love, Charlie Brown" (version 6, harpsichord)
- "Charlie Brown and His All-Stars" (piano + brass)
- "Charlie Brown Theme" (version 2) (Vince Guaraldi, Lee Mendelson)
- "School Days" (version 2, horns) (Will D. Cobb, Gus Edwards)
- "You're in Love, Charlie Brown" (version 7, piano + saxophone, end credits)
- "Fanfare Finish"[4]
No official soundtrack for You're in Love, Charlie Brown was commercially released. However, "Peppermint Patty" (piano + horns) was made available as a bonus track on the 2005 CD release of Vince Guaraldi with the San Francisco Boys Chorus (1967).[4][6] In addition, variations of "Red Baron", "Peppermint Patty", and the eponymous theme song were released on the 1968 album Oh Good Grief!.[4][7]
Notability
You're In Love, Charlie Brown is notable for at least two important firsts:
- It marked the on-screen debut of Peppermint Patty, who was introduced in the classic comic strip the year before.
- It was also the first special that used "tromboning" (a muted trombone) in place of adult voices.
Additionally similar to the fight sequences of the 1966 Batman series, it was the only known Peanuts special in which the more intense sound effects are actually spelled out in onomatopoeic words: wiggly R's when Charlie Brown's alarm clock goes off, and a very hard, straight word "Click-clack" when he opens some school doors getting to school silently, as he is late (however, in The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show episode "Linus and Lucy" the word Pow can be seen when Snoopy punches somebody in Sally's class).
This special was rebroadcast yearly on CBS from June 1968 to June 1972. It was first released on home video in the 1980s by Kartes Video Communications. It was also paired with Snoopy's Getting Married, Charlie Brown on a 2-pack in 1989. Along with the special It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown, this was released to DVD as a bonus feature on the Be My Valentine, Charlie Brown-Remastered Deluxe Edition DVD on January 15, 2008. On July 7, 2009, it was re-released on DVD, in remastered form as part of the DVD box set, "Peanuts 1960s Collection." It was released on the Happiness is Peanuts: Friends Forever DVD on December 27, 2011.
References
- Terrace, Vincent (2013). Television Specials: 5,336 Entertainment Programs, 1936-2012 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. p. 92. ISBN 9780786474448.
- Woolery, George W. (1989). Animated TV Specials: The Complete Directory to the First Twenty-Five Years, 1962-1987. Scarecrow Press. pp. 471–472. ISBN 0-8108-2198-2. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
- Lee Mendelson Film Productions Retrieved December 28, 2017.
- Bang, Derrick. "Vince Guaraldi's Peanuts Song Library: You're in Love, Charlie Brown". fivecentsplease.org. Derrick Bang, Scott McGuire. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
- Bang, Derrick. "Vince Guaraldi Timeline". fivecentsplease.org. Derrick Bang, Scott McGuire. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
- Vince Guaraldi with the San Francisco Boys Chorus at AllMusic. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
- Ginell, Richard S. "Oh, Good Grief!". AllMusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 15 January 2020.