Toronto Star

‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ still resonates for its actors

Movie was just a footnote for cast until late 1970s

- RODNEY HO

“It’s a Wonderful Life,” Frank Capra’s story about redemption and a life fulfilled, bombed at the box office when it was released in early 1947.

The Christmas movie that year that became the classic of its time? “Miracle on 34th Street.”

For decades, “It’s a Wonderful Life” was largely forgotten, until 1974 when Republic Pictures failed to renew its copyright protection. The film lapsed into the public domain, meaning anyone could show the film without obtaining permission or paying royalties. Its ubiquity on broadcast TV over the next two decades fuelled its popularity and gave the film a second life.

Since 1994, NBC has had exclusive broadcast rights to the film in the U.S. after Republic Pictures proved it owned the original story and the music. “It’s a Wonderful Life” will air on NBC Dec. 4 and 24, both at 8 p.m. EST. In Canada, it airs on CTV Dec. 24 at 8 p.m.

Now it’s hard to imagine life without the film. It was ranked No. 20 of the 100 greatest films in 2007 by the American Film Institute. Capra and stars Donna Reed and Jimmy Stewart in interviews said it was their favourite film they ever worked on.

It’s also a treasure that keeps on giving for living cast members of that film: Jimmy Hawkins, who played four-year-old Tommy Bailey; and Karolyn Grimes, the six-year-old Zuzu Bailey, who uttered the famous line, “Look, Daddy. Teacher says, ‘Every time a bell rings, an angel gets his wings.’”

The movie, though, was just a footnote in their lives until the late 1970s.

“I started hearing more about it then,” Hawkins said in a recent Zoom interview with the Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on to promote the 75th anniversar­y Blu-ray release, which came out Nov. 16. “People were holding trivia parties. I thought, ‘Wow! This suddenly got big!’” He remained an actor in the 1950s and ’60s and worked with Reed on “The Donna Reed Show” from 1958 to ’66.

Grimes got out of show business in her teens after her mother died from early-onset Alzheimer’s disease and her father was killed in a car accident. Her life was suffused with tragedy. Her first husband died in a hunting accident. One of her children committed suicide. And her second husband died of cancer. She didn’t even see “It’s a Wonderful Life” until she was 40 years old.

“I was enthralled with the messages from that movie when I first saw it,” Grimes said. “I knew then why it was very special, and I could understand why I started getting fan mail and people wanted to have interviews with me.”

Back in 1980, she had no idea how journalist­s even tracked her down because her name had changed and there was no Google back in the day. But the publicity enabled her to reunite with Stewart and Reed, and Grimes became the unofficial ambassador of the movie.

Over the past four decades, she has attended countless screenings, benefits and convention­s. She helped create a museum for the film and returns each December to Seneca Falls, New York, the model for the movie’s small-town Bedford Falls, for the “It’s a Wonderful Life” Festival.

For Grimes, the film’s message is timeless: “How each person’s life touches another and we’re given an opportunit­y to make a difference. That’s so important.”

Hawkins said people have come up to both of them and said watching the film kept them from killing themselves. And even at age 79, he said he feels like he’s four all over again when he thinks about the movie.

“When people ask us questions about being on the set, you click back into it,” Hawkins said. “It’s so vivid. It seems like a million years ago or just yesterday.”

He said when he joined “The Donna Reed Show,” Reed told him crew members on the set of “It’s a Wonderful Life” had a nickname for him: Rip Van Winkle.

“With all this commotion going on, lights, cameras, I’d fall asleep,” he said. “When it was time to shoot, they’d wake me up and I’d be all bright-eyed and bushy-tailed!”

Hawkins also bragged years later that he had won the watermelon eating contest at the wrap party. His secret? Swallowing the watermelon seeds whole.

 ?? HULTON ARCHIVE TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? James Stewart as George Bailey, hugs actor Karolyn Grimes, who plays his daughter, Zuzu, in “It’s a Wonderful Life.”
HULTON ARCHIVE TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE James Stewart as George Bailey, hugs actor Karolyn Grimes, who plays his daughter, Zuzu, in “It’s a Wonderful Life.”

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