The Bishop’s Christmas Movie

If you’re keeping track, it’s the first Monday in December which really means nothing most years but this year I remembered so it’s time for my Kind of Yearly When I Remember It Annual Holiday Movie Special Post. It’s not a “best of” list or even “my favorites” list. You see, every year I seem to find a new holiday to be my current favorite. “I say my current favorite because like children there can be no real favorite among Christmas movies. The favorite is the one making you smile today or remember yesterday, the one encouraging a perfect alternative to an imperfect world and providing an escape from the ordinary.” That was true in the 2019 version of this post, was true before I wrote that, and is true today.

There are so many movies to pick from. Christmas movies, real Christmas movies, not the movie mill versions put out by television networks that would have been better off sticking to greeting cards, come in two varieties…this who ask of a great deal of suspension of disbelief such as “It’s a Wonderful Life” and those that seem they could have been plucked from among your own family movies like “Love the Coopers.” This year’s choice falls between. It certainly asks for a great deal of suspension of disbelief but is the perfect alternative to the imperfect world as seen through a rather special home movie.

There is something for everybody in this year’s favorite.  For the lover of classic film Elsa Lanchester shows up now and then. Intellectuals will enjoy seeing Monty Woolley and for the more down to earth there is a scene or two featuring James Gleason. Gladys Cooper is the perfect gift for those who look for high society types in their movies. The lover of all things continental will love seeing David Niven, the lover of poise and grace will love seeing Loretta Young, and lover of people whose very lives beg for a suspension of disbelief will love seeing Archibald Alec Leach. Once told by an interviewer, “Everybody would like to be Cary Grant”, Grant is said to have replied, “So would I.” And so Archibald spent his life becoming Cary Grant.

If you haven’t recognized it from that cast list, the movie is “The Bishop’s Wife,” David Niven is the bishop, Loretta Young the wife, and Cary Grant is an angel is disguise. Actually, not much of a disguise as he tells the bishop at their first meeting that he is an angel sent to help the bishop once the bishop figures out where he needs help.

The story of the making of “The Bishop’s Wife” is as much a story as the movie itself. Originally Niven was cast as the angel and Grant the bishop. There are differing accounts if producer Samuel Goldwyn or director Henry Koster made the switch, but there is no question the role reversal worked to the movie’s benefit. Critic Bodley Crowther wrote, “it comes very close to being the most enchanting picture of the year.” (New York Times, Dec. 10, 1947) It’s also been said Grant did not want to switch roles but did at Goldwyn’s insistence. Considering Archibald turned himself into Cary it was a piece of cake for Cary to turn his bishop demeanor into that of a charmingly charismatic guardian angel.

The movie is Christmas. It is most of what anybody would want to expect from any holiday. It’s charming, delightful, thoughtful, warm, and fells like an old friend. If it doesn’t leave you with a tear starting to form, if not already running down your cheek by the final scene, then you have no soul. Adapted from Robert Nathan’s novel, it was not well received in 1947, audiences feeling it to be too religious. In 2023, I find it perfect to be this year’s favorite holiday movie. Maybe it’s time we get some religion in us. That would be a true escape from the ordinary.

Merry Holidays!


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14 thoughts on “The Bishop’s Christmas Movie

    1. Please look for it. I think you would like it. David Niven hits all the feels… sometimes so sure, sometimes so confused, sometimes so certain. He reminded me much of the character he played in “A Kiss in the Dark,” not a holiday movie but a charming gift of watching if you haven’t already – or lately 🎄

      1. Thank you for two great recommendations! Paul and I suffered through a newer holiday movie last night and wanted to poke our eyes out it was so bad. Like really bad. Sigh. Appreciate the tips! 🥰😉🥰

          1. Keep ’em coming. Out of desperation we watched National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation twice while sister Lisa was visiting over Thanksgiving. I love listening to her LOL so it was worth it, but we need new options! 🤣

  1. It’s always a hoot and a holler to read your current Christmas favorite–and I must confess, I’ve never seen this one! My lack of knowledge of this feels uncomfortable, so I’ll be sure to look for it. We all need more hope, more joy, more anticipation of what this waiting period of Advent is all about–and good, clean fun, and humor. Thanks for bringing all that!

    1. You’re not alone in not seeing it Dayle. I don’t know why it’s not a more popular movie. Probably because it wasn’t a big hit then so few networks want to spare for the royalties to it now. It is truly a classic Christmas movie, with choirs and trees, snowball fights and ice skating, small churches and a large cathedral. And of course, an earthbound angel. And people said it was too religious to be popular! What did they know? 😇

    1. I hope you enjoy both. They start for Christmas from two different angles and both end up at the same place. Love the Coopers was my pick for that years favorite in 2019. I ended that post with:
      My current favorite Christmas movie for this year is Love the Coopers. It’s so unmovielike! It asks you to suspend very little disbelief and quite believably could be about any family, including mine. You want to give them all back but you can’t because you love them so dearly. Love the Coopers, I think it needs a comma but Steven Rogers didn’t and it’s his story so I guess he should know. Maybe it’s more commanding that way. Or maybe it’s supposed to be just a little ambiguous. Just like us.
      (https://iammichaelross.net/2019/12/05/yippee-ki-yay/)

    1. Enchants is such a great description for it. Something magical but more so. A specialness that is hard to find.
      Thank you for reading and commenting on it!

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