Welcome to a look Inside The Holocron. A collection of articles from the archives of *starwars.com no longer directly available.
(*Archived here with Permission utilising The Internet Archive Wayback Machine)
Holiday Special: Script and Directors
The following interviews were originally printed in a double issue of Filmfax magazine #69/70 from 1998.
None of the former-production staff remembers how the special came about but co-executive producer Gary Smith of Smith-Hemion Productions (The Emmy
FAX: How did you become involved in the “Holiday Special”?
RIPPS: Lucasfilm came to 20th Century-Fox, and they came to Smith-Hemion Productions because of their reputation for doing high quality TV specials. Pat Proft and I had worked for Smith-Hemion. We were chosen for this project because of our work on Captain & Tenniel, which combined comedy and music.
FAX: Did Lucasfilm present you with a story?
RIPPS: Yes. Pat and I spent a day with George Lucas in which he took a piece of paper and said “How long is a TV movie?” He put that number down and said “Now let’s write what we’re going to do every minute.’ It was the only day of my life that I forgot to have lunch!
FAX: What was George Lucas’s original vision?
RIPPS: I think he wanted to make a sweet and sentimental vision of a holiday season and I think it evolved into something maudlin which was not what I thought his vision was. Now I don’t mean to speak for him, but my inclination was that it got kind of sappy.
FAX: It was an eclectic combination of elements: drama. space fantasy. and musical variety.
RIPPS: To me, it didn’t come together. The ideas were all right but I’m not sure that they belonged in the same room. What was interesting to me was that Lucas started talking about Star Wars as if it was a real world. He said things like “Well, you know Han Solo is married to a Wookiee. but we can’t say that.” Now that was 20 years ago [in 1998], so my memory may be wrong. [As outrageous as Ripps’s recollection sounds, there is evidence supporting it. Pat Proft corroborates it and an early draft of the Star Wars script (January 28, 1975) has Han Solo living with a furry female creature who he kisses. Proft also remembers learning that Han was raised by Wookiees, which is verified on pages 46 & 131 of Laurent Bouzereau’s Star Wars: The Annotated Screenplays.]
This was a world that the audience only knew a little bit about. It was like he was showing pieces of history; however, he knew the whole world, a world that we may never know. It was almost like he had discovered the Sphinx and was only showing parts of it, but he had it all.
He creates not just biography but history and context. It was remarkable. I hope that, as a writer, I learned from that. When you look at a character it’s not just who they are on the page but who they were before you created them. He was one of the most
FAX: After the meeting ended, how did work progress?
FAX: Did George Lucas’s basic story stay the same? Was it always about Chewie trying to get home for in time for Life Day?
FAX: One of the more interesting aspects about the “Holiday Special” was the lack of violence.
RIPPS: I remember that we were talking about prime time television for families. You have to remember that this was a long time ago when what was violent then would be considered a cartoon now. I know that we were careful not to show violence.
FAX: Was it a challenge writing a Star Wars script with minimal violence?
Smith & Hemion are terrific producers with real integrity. My inclination — and I could be wrong — was that their vision was not the same as Lucas’s. Everybody involved had great respect for the film because it was more than a movie: it was almost literature. This was a newly-minted icon and maybe we had too much reverence for it. It’s always a problem when you’re trying to interpret somebody else’s vision.
RIPPS: Obviously the high point was working with Lucas. He was one of the most interesting people that I ever spent any time with.
[After this interview was conducted, Ripps had a chance to watch the special for the first time in decades. He described it as “sweet” but added “I don’t think it was George Lucas’s vision. That’s pretty clear because he doesn’t even want to talk about it.”]Just as a FYI, to avoid old posts feeling forgotten, miserable and becoming one with the Force, and you know what those Star Wars posts are like they want be a blue glowy things, so this post has been republished to cheer it up, it WAS Originally posted 2023-02-08 08:00:53.
