Deck the Halls with Bright, Shiny, Aluminum Objects By Brendan Henehan
On December 19, 1965, my grandmother Margaret Killian Marin scribbled a short entry in her diary. It stated that her husband, Ernie, had put up a four- foot aluminum Christmas tree. My sister remembers that the tree held court in a space my grandparents grandly called “The River Room” that overlooked a bend in the river that ran through Belding, Michigan. My grandparents’ simple action came at a critical moment in the history of aluminum trees: Just 10 days earlier, a low-cost, animated, holiday TV special had stunned its producers by being an instant hit. A Charlie Brown Christmas captured 15 million viewers, and an annual tradition was born. Lovers of aluminum Christmas trees could not help but notice that, in the special, Charlie Brown had loudly dismissed a shiny, aluminum tree, choosing to buy a forlorn live fir instead. The aluminum Christmas tree industry never recovered from that prime-time rejection. But I think my grandparents made a fine choice back in 1965. And the 7-year-old version of me was clearly smitten with the color wheel spinning under that shining four-foot tree in their humble River Room.
Fast Forward to 1998. Young Brendan was now middle-aged Brendan and the producer of Almanac , a long-time Friday night public TV show in the Twin Cities. Almanac host Cathy Wurzer kept telling me about the wonders of her grandparents’ six-foot Evergleam aluminum Christmas tree. The Steele Family Singers were going to perform holiday tunes on our show that week, so she volunteered to bring in the tree and use it as part of the set. I agreed, and the combination of the Steeles and shiny trees became an annual Almanac tradition. Don’t get me wrong. I love live Christmas trees. I buy one every year. But there’s something all space-agey and majestic about a twirling, shining aluminum tree. So I started looking for one to buy. Luckily, the metal tree market in the late 90s was still a bit soft. I found a seven-foot aluminum Evergleam-brand tree at an antique store in Stillwater, and I remember calling my spouse asking if it was okay to spend 50 bucks on it. She said sure. So I brought it home. I soon saw a two-foot Evergleam going for $15 at another antique store. I had to have that one, too.
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DECEMBER 2023
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