Part concert, part travel documentary and with a tincture of comedy and fantasy, this 58-minute television movie follows the American operatic mezzo-soprano Frederica "Flicka" von Stade, the Broadway singers Rex Smith and Melba Moore and the classical conductor and pianist Julius Rudel through a four day Christmas holiday in St. Wolfgang im Salzkammergut, a village on the shores of the Wolfgangsee in the Salzburg region of the Austrian Alps. The movie begins with von Stade arriving at the village's quayside on the ferry-boat Österreich. She is met by a small, rapt girl and a smaller, less rapt boy, who take her to the home that she will be sharing with them. The following morning, after helping the children to get dressed, von Stade leads them on a shopping trip to the local shops, visiting a greengrocer, a butcher, a delicatessen, a patisserie, a florist, a gift shop, a traditional Austrian clothes shop, a man who makes candles for Christmas wreaths and a man who carves wooden figures for Christmas crèches. Her purchases offloaded, she accompanies the children on an expedition up and down the misty Schafberg on the Schafbergbahn, a coal-fired rack railway. In the evening, with the children safely tucked up in bed, she joins Moore, Smith and Rudel on a visit to an old-fashioned tavern for an evening of beer, romance and folk dancing with women in dirndl costumes and thigh-slapping men in lederhosen. Rex Smith entertains the company with a song. On the way home, von Stade and her friends encounter three mysterious, kingly horsemen who seem like a vision of the Magi. The next day, Christmas Eve, begins with von Stade going with the children to the town square where brass players high in the tower of the local church have summoned them for some folk dancing. In the evening, she gives a song recital with Moore and Rudel and meets the village's soprano choir. Once back home with her hosts, von Stade and Rudel tell the children how people came to celebrate Christmas with conifer trees. Then, explaining the history of Santa Claus on the way, she walks with them and the rest of the villagers in a candlelit procession to church for Midnight Mass, before she takes them home again and puts them to bed with a lullaby. A concluding Christmas morning sequence recapitulates the highlights of the film and offers up several humorous outtakes before the credits roll.
Music
The film includes twenty-two pieces of music:
"Listen All Ye People on Earth"; von Stade and choir
"Rise up, Shepherd, and Follow". arr. James Elmo Dorsey; Moore
"O Dieu, O Dieu", arr. Canteloube; von Stade, Moore and choir
"O Tannenbaum"; von Stade
"O Little Town of Bethlehem"; von Stade
"Chansons Tous le Plus Haut", arr. Canteloube; von Stade
"He shall feed his flock" from The Messiah ; von Stade and Rudel
"Alleluia" from Exsultate, Jubilate ; von Stade
"Stille Nacht, Heilige Nacht" ; von Stade
"The Twelve Days of Christmas" ; von Stade
"Alleluia" from Exsultate, Jubilate ; von Stade
Credits
The principal contributors to the film are:
Frederica von Stade
Melba Moore
Rex Smith
Kammer Ensemble des Wiener Jeunesse
Mixed Choir of St Wolfgang
Werner Tripp
Karl Swoboda
Johanna Steinberger
Jan Josef Wnek
Frank Edele
Heinz Hruza
Mathäus Eisl
Brass band of St Wolfgang
Sonja Schweiger
Adrian Steffny
Beverley Francis
Children's Folk Dance Group of St Wolfgang
Trachtenverein Dancers
Österreichischer Rundfunk Symphonie-Orchester
Julius Rudel
Yanna Kroyt Brandt
Patricia Birch
Critical reception
In 1987, the Los Angeles Times's John Henken found the film "as pretty as a post card - and not much livelier". "Taped in October without a hint of snow, the program follows around and environs, looking like outtakes from an exceptionally sedate travelogue. The musical selections are nicely sung, though the lip-syncing is often only approximate. The international carols newly arranged by Joseph Canteloube prove particularly effective in Von Stade's smooth, silken singing and the touristy context." In 1988, readers of Opera Canada were advised to "run, not walk, as they say, to the nearest record store" to add Christmas with Flicka to their DVD collections. The film was also discussed in Rebecca Krafft and Brian O'Doherty's The Arts on Television, 1976-1990.
Broadcast and home media history
The film was made in 1987, and was first broadcast in the US as part of the Great Performances series in December 1989. In 1998, VIEW Video released it through Image Entertainment as a Laserdisc with 4:3 NTSC colour video and Dolby Digital stereo audio, and also as a VHS cassette. In 2005, Kultur released it on a region-free DVD, again with 4:3 NTSC colour video and Dolby Digital stereo audio. The only literature that comes with the DVD is a list of the film's chapters. None of the home media releases of the film includes any behind-the-scenes featurettes.