Chicago Sun-Times

HOLIDAY HEARTWARME­RS

Get set for more TV Christmas movies than ever this season

- BY ALICIA RANCILIO Associated Press

NEW YORK — Have you heard the one about the girl who didn’t care about Christmas but found herself in a small town for the holidays surrounded by decoration­s, cookies and carolers, and found a new boyfriend and her Christmas spirit by Dec. 25? Hallmark Channel has, and they’re airing 22 original movies this year built around plots similar to that. The premise may vary, but the themes are the same, and Hallmark is very OK with that.

“Yes, you can pretty much guarantee that when you meet our two leads in the first 10 minutes of a Hallmark movie, it’s guaranteed that they will end up together,” said Michelle Vicary, the executive vice president of programmin­g and network publicity for Crown Media and Family Networks.

While regular network primetime programmin­g tends to take a hiatus during the holiday season, it’s Hallmark Channel’s time to shine. Their holiday movies are so popular, they began airing Christmas movies on Oct. 26 and wrap up on Jan. 1.

“When viewers kept telling us by virtue of the ratings that they wanted more [Christmas], it was a natural to extend the time that we were programmin­g for them,” said Vicary.

Hallmark sells shirts that say, “All I want to do is drink hot cocoa and watch Hallmark Channel.” This year there’s also an app called Countdown to Christmas to keep track of the programmin­g on Hallmark Channel and its sister channel, Hallmark Movies and Mysteries (which offers more spiritual fare.) There’s an option to set alerts on your phone and add the movie start times to your calendar. On launch day, it had 140,000 downloads.

This year, Hallmark Channel has films starring LeAnn Rimes, Kellie Pickler and Patti LaBelle, but the network also features recurring actresses, dubbed the “Christmas queens” internally by Hallmark, who front a new movie a season on the network: Candace Cameron Bure, Lacey Chabert, Danica McKellar and Lori Loughlin.

Bure reigns supreme. “For the last three years she has had the No. 1 Christmas movie on the Hallmark Channel with very, very stiff competitio­n from Chabert and Loughlin,” said Vicary.

Bure said the reaction to her Hallmark Christmas movies encourages her to keep making them but also find interestin­g ways to tell stories that fit the formula.

“It’s a big deal to decide which movie to do,” she said. “The competitiv­e side of me says, ‘Hey, I want to keep topping those charts and helping the company improve and helping my numbers,’” she said. This year’s film, “A Shoe Addict’s Christmas,” is based on a novel by best-selling author Beth Harbison.

The biggest motivation for returning to Hallmark year after year is the fans, said Bure. She recalled a letter from an older man whose wife had passed away after more than 50 years of marriage. She loved Christmas and would decorate for the season early, and particular­ly loved Bure’s Christmas movies. He forced himself to not only keep up his wife’s tradition of decorating but also sat down to watch Bure’s movie that year because it’s what they would have done as a couple, and it made him feel closer to her.

Chabert, who is also known for roles in “Party of Five” and “Mean Girls,” says she considers it “an honor” to keep making Christmas movies for Hallmark.

She also says the movies speak to important themes: “Disconnect­ing from the world, spending time with family, and just being in touch with what’s most important and I think that’s always a good reminder.”

Hallmark Channel isn’t the only network airing holiday fare. Lifetime does it too and begins airing mostly holiday programmin­g after Nov. 21. Films this year include “Every Day is Christmas” starring Toni Braxton. They also have their own crop of “go to” talent including Tatyana Ali of “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” and Melissa Joan Hart of “Sabrina the Teenage Witch.” Tia Mowry-Hardrict of “Sister Sister” has the distinctio­n of appearing on both Hallmark Channel and Lifetime with new movies this season. She stars in Lifetime’s “My Christmas Inn” and “A Gingerbrea­d Romance” on Hallmark Channel.

Hart’s “A Very Nutty Christmas” debuts on Lifetime Nov. 30. “I don’t want to make Christmas movies just my thing,” said Hart. “But it’s the only place where TV movies still thrive,” she said.

“Just having something to watch that’s uplifting and light and romantic,” she added, “I think it’s something really missing in theaters and mainstream television these days.”

Netflix has also followed suit with its own original holiday movies. Last year it offered “A Christmas Prince” starring Rose McIver and this year there’s a sequel, “A Christmas Prince: The Royal Wedding.” They’ve also added new movies starring Kurt Russell, Kat Graham and Vanessa Hudgens.

 ?? ELIZA MORSE/HALLMARK CHANNEL VIA AP ?? Patti LaBelle stars in “Christmas Everlastin­g.”
ELIZA MORSE/HALLMARK CHANNEL VIA AP Patti LaBelle stars in “Christmas Everlastin­g.”
 ?? BETTINA STRAUSS/LIFETIME VIA AP MICHAEL GIBSON/NETFLIX VIA AP ?? Toni Braxton (center) and Gloria Reuben (right) pictured in a scene from “Every Day is Christmas.” Kurt Russell in a scene from “The Christmas Chronicles,” currently streaming on Netflix.
BETTINA STRAUSS/LIFETIME VIA AP MICHAEL GIBSON/NETFLIX VIA AP Toni Braxton (center) and Gloria Reuben (right) pictured in a scene from “Every Day is Christmas.” Kurt Russell in a scene from “The Christmas Chronicles,” currently streaming on Netflix.
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