******SPOOKY-SEASON SPOILERS!******
And now for something completely different. Taking a brief yet seasonally-appropriate break from my site’s usual sci-fi/horror/cinematic scribblings, this column explores a warm fuzzy childhood memory of mine; 1966’s “It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown.” This was the third Charles Schulz Peanuts’ animated special, debuting on the CBS network after “Charlie Brown All-Stars” (1966) and “A Charlie Brown Christmas” (1965). That Christmas holiday special was the first animated cartoon based on Schulz’s evergreen “Peanuts” comic strip, which ran from 1950 to 2000; ending the same year as its prolific creator’s death.

The Peanuts comic strips, as well as their many spinoffs, specials and movies (including the wonderfully entertaining 2015 medley, “The Peanuts Movie”) innocently illustrated the trials and tribulations of 20th century kids entirely from their perspective; though peppered with a few sophisticated quips and in-jokes to keep adults engaged as well. Adults in the Peanutsverse were never seen and only heard as offscreen trombone sounds. Parents were similarly invisible, as the Peanuts crew went about their various imaginative, small-scale adventures. The Peanuts cartoons were the heirs apparent to the live-action “Our Gang/Little Rascals” feature film shorts from the 1920s-1930s.

Of the many Peanuts specials and movies, “It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown” is my personal favorite; not only for depicting my favorite season of the year in colorful fall hues, but also because it’s where the Peanuts holiday cartoons arguably hit a more playful stride after the heavier Yuletide messaging of “A Charlie Brown Christmas.”
For this column, I’m going to let the images and captions speak largely for themselves, followed with my usual Summing It Up section.
“It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown.”


Vegetable Rights’ advocate Linus didn’t realize that their prized pumpkin would meet such a violent end.

Note: The animation cells and backgrounds are arguably crude by today’s standards, but they perfectly capture the look and feel of Charles M. Schulz’s original cartoon strip, which ran for half a century. Even the more recent “The Peanuts Movie” from 2015 (which used modern 3D computer graphics) still strived to capture the deceptively simple, stylized look of the Peanuts universe.

After Charlie Brown (Peter Robbins) carefully rakes up a pile of fallen leaves with a little help from his pal Snoopy (Bill Melendez), Linus does a dive right into that pile with a wet sucker (yuck!). Wet candy covered in dry leaves were the sorts of things we worried about as kids.
Note: In recent decades, actor Peter Robbins (born Louis G. Nanasi) had trouble with the law (a situation all too common with some who are thrust into the spotlight at an early age). After doing time in prison on stalking charges, Robbins eventually took his own life in 2022. If you or anyone you know is contemplating suicide, please call 988 immediately.

Lucy finds a loophole in her own signed promissory note not to yank the football from Charlie Brown at the last moment–which she does, of course. Lucy can be seen as a bully to modern audiences, and I knew a few kids just like her when I was a boy.

Charlie Brown intervenes after catching his kid sister Sally (Cathy Steinberg) mooning over her kiddie crush Linus, who is writing to “The Great Pumpkin,” in hopes of proving his fidelity to this imaginary holiday mascot.
Note: “The Great Pumpkin” was a Halloween icon created by Charles Schulz for his Peanuts strip in 1959, and which didn’t exist in the pop culture zeitgeist until this special aired in October of 1966. Perhaps Linus was, as my wife joked, a closeted pagan? For a more extreme (and equally imaginary) look into paganism, see: “The Wicker Man” (1973).

Lucy admonishes her ‘blockhead’ kid brother for his belief in the Great Pumpkin, as she leafs through the latest issue of TV Guide, with herself on the cover, of course.
Note: Once a staple of every US household, TV Guide magazine (along with bulky cathode-ray tube TVs), is one of the anachronisms that might leave younger viewers scratching their heads. Another reason why this special is perhaps best enjoyed with multiple generations of viewers.


Naturally Lucy has to shoot his optimism down, by insisting he was on the Do Not Invite list. Mean Girl Lucy only seems happy when others aren’t. Nevertheless, she’s redeemed by her grudging love of her brother Linus.

The Peanuts crew try on their costumes, including Lucy as a witch, Snoopy as a World War 1 flying ace, Charlie Brown as a somewhat “hole-y” ghost (he had a little trouble with the scissors) and Pigpen (Gail DeFaria), whose permanent dust cloud penetrates his costume as well!
Note: Back when I was a kid, most of our costumes were cheap and homemade. My parents couldn’t afford the plastic mask and smock costumes that were all the rage at the time, so we ended up dressed as ghosts, hobos, or some other subpar costuming. I envy today’s kids who have access to cosplayer quality costumes either from stores or online, via eBay, Amazon or Etsy.




The story then takes a surreal turn into Snoopy’s solo imagined adventure as the World War 1 flying ace. Snoopy envisions his dog house as a biplane, which gets shot down over occupied France! We then follow the crashed canine as he scurries stealthily across the occupied French countryside, hoping to reach the resistance forces in his lucidly imagined war scenario. Director Bill Melendez also supplied all of Snoopy’s various cries, laughs, giggles and even howls.
Note: I have admit that when I was a kid, I thought Snoopy’s World War 1 subplot went on a tad too long, though I always loved the sequence’s mysterious music (courtesy of lead composer Vince Guaraldi) and its beautifully colored backgrounds.

Linus’s promise of toys and other wonders from the Great Pumpkin lure smitten Sally to join him in his pumpkin patch vigil.

The Peanuts gang go out trick or treating, and use simple brown paper grocery bags for their treats (in my day, we used old pillow cases instead, because they held more candy). Lucy asks for extra candy for her foolhardy brother, who’s fully committed to his Great Pumpkin vigil, while poor Charlie Brown gets nothing but rocks (!).
Note: If I were Charlie Brown? I might’ve been tempted to return those rocks through the soon-to-be shattered windows of those who dropped them into my candy bag. We Gen-Xers were an ornery lot.

Returning from trick or treating, the Peanuts gang checks in on Sally and Linus in the pumpkin patch, as they continue their vigil for the Great Pumpkin, against the better judgment of their friends. At this point, Sally is beginning to lose some of her earlier, infatuation-enabled resolve…

Charlie Brown is recruited by his nemesis Lucy and party hostess Violet (Ann Altieri) to “model” for them; only to learn they’re using his round bald head as a template for their jack o’-lantern design. Ouch…

Violet’s party is in full-swing, as Snoopy sneaks inside to submerge into the apple-bobbing basin and prank Lucy.
Note: As someone who’s tried apple-bobbing a few times, it’s my sincere wish that this once-beloved Halloween tradition go the way of the Dodo bird, if it hasn’t already. My memories of apple-bobbing include water going up my nose, as I’d pull a tooth-marked apple from a basin of unsanitary water and partygoer saliva. No thanks!

Schroeder (Glenn Mendelson) plays a medley of World War 1-era tunes, including “It’s a Long Way to Tipperary,” “There’s a Long, Long Trail,” “Pack Up Your Troubles In Your Old Kit Bag,” and “Roses of Picardy.” The tunes go from jaunty to melancholy, causing Snoopy to experience a manic mix of moods, as the beagle even elicits an embarrassed howl.
Note: Glenn Mendelson, who voiced Schroeder (and “Shermy”), was the son of producer Lee Mendelson.

Snoopy pranks Linus and Sally by rising from the pumpkin patch. Linus faints. Sally is furious.

Big brother Charlie Brown comes to take the irate Sally home, as Linus learns nothing compares to the fury of a girl who’s been cheated out of tricks or treats.
Note: The worst Halloween of my youth came in 1982 at age 15, as I spent the holiday having my appendix removed. I did Halloween night alone in a darkened hospital room, recovering in a hospital bed, watching multiple reruns of “M*A*S*H” on a crummy black & white hospital TV. At the time, Charlie Brown’s bag of rocks didn’t look so bad…



Charlie Brown bemoans his candy bag full of rocks, while a surprisingly resolute Linus vows to wait for the Great Pumpkin again next Halloween. Blockhead’s gotta blockhead, right?
The End.
Summing It Up
“It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown” remains a sentimental favorite of mine. It premiered the year of my birth, and I distinctly remember watching it every Halloween season, sometimes on Halloween night—usually after coming home exhausted from trick or treating. For that reason, it’s inextricably linked to warm childhood memories of my favorite holiday.

Doing my best to be objective (a losing battle, perhaps), modern youngsters might find this 25-minute cartoon quaint and a lot slower-paced than they’re used to these days. In all honesty, even I used to find Snoopy’s surreal World War 1 ‘Flying Ace’ sequence a bit overlong myself; though I’ve always appreciated its moody music and beautifully-colored autumnal backgrounds. Watching it today, I find Lucy’s treatment of Linus and Charlie Brown to be borderline abusive. However, Lucy’s abrasiveness is offset when she quietly fetches her freezing kid brother and gently puts him to bed. Indeed, kids will be kids, though sometimes they can surprise us geezers with random acts of kindness, too.

“It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown” is a sweet, sanitized, nostalgic window into how Halloween was celebrated when I was a boy; with the hours of unsupervised trick or treating (an invigorating first taste of future independence), and the colorful parties (went to a few of those in my day; threw a few as well).
In recent decades, I’ve seen some of my friends’ children responding positively to this beloved cartoon from my youth, which tells me that perhaps it still holds a few universal truths about being a kid.
Where to Watch
Once an annual event on the United States’ CBS network and after a couple appearances on Public TV, “It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown” is now available to stream exclusively on AppleTV (subscription of which does not require purchase of Apple products, FYI). Of course, the beloved vintage special can also be purchased on Paramount Blu-Ray and DVD, via Amazon. If you’re a Halloween fan of a certain age? This one’s a keeper.


Great article on a family favourite. I actually learned something today.
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Last year, the local drive-in played ‘It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown!’ on the big Screen 1 and our family went to see it. What a great night.
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https://demaras.com/2023/10/31/drive-in-2023/
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Just thought I would share that with you.
Thank you! 🙏
If anyone’s interested? My wife did an absolutely killer Lucy cosplay for 2016 San Diego Comic Con: https://live.staticflickr.com/7716/28404817961_b5fcafb476_h.jpg
I’ve been buying the remastered soundtracks by Vince Guaraldi over the past year or so- started with the Christmas one and have bought this one too. Gorgeous music, laid-back and fun. They don’t make ’em like they used to.
No they don’t indeed.
I too, have the remastered CDs for the Christmas and Great Pumpkin specials. Vince Guaraldi is part of the sonic mosaic of my childhood.
This has been a family favorite for Halloween. Even in the most recent years. The Snoopy segments are my favorites from this one. Thank you for your review. 🎃
My pleasure Mike 🎃👻😊