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Eager to repeat the success of 1965's A Charlie Brown Christmas, CBS instructed director Bill Melendez, producer Lee Mendelson, and writer/creator Charles M. Schulz to craft another Peanuts holiday special that they could rebroadcast year after year indefinitely. Mendelson pushed Halloween as the next logical step and, after bringing back most of the original voice cast and musician Vince Guaraldi, the team produced another seasonal perennial. Freely adapted from one of Schulz's storylines in the Peanuts newspaper comic, It's The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown was a ratings smash that quickly attained a stature in pop culture comparable to its yuletide predecessor.
By Ryan Valentine5
44 ratings
Eager to repeat the success of 1965's A Charlie Brown Christmas, CBS instructed director Bill Melendez, producer Lee Mendelson, and writer/creator Charles M. Schulz to craft another Peanuts holiday special that they could rebroadcast year after year indefinitely. Mendelson pushed Halloween as the next logical step and, after bringing back most of the original voice cast and musician Vince Guaraldi, the team produced another seasonal perennial. Freely adapted from one of Schulz's storylines in the Peanuts newspaper comic, It's The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown was a ratings smash that quickly attained a stature in pop culture comparable to its yuletide predecessor.