
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
Had a very shiny nose,
And if you ever saw it,
You could even say it glows.
All of the other reindeer
Used to laugh and call him names;
They never let poor Rudolph Join in any reindeer games.
Then one foggy Christmas Eve,
Santa came to say:
Rudolph with your nose so bright,
Won't you guide my sleigh tonight?"
Then how the reindeer loved him
As they shouted out with glee,
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,
You'll go down in history."
Montgomery Ward distributed 2.4 million copies of the Rudolph booklet in 1939,
and although wartime paper shortages curtailed printing for the next several years,
a total of 6 million copies had been given by the end of 1946.
. The post-war demand for licensing the Rudolph character was tremendous,
but since May had created the story as an employee of Montgomery Ward, they held the copyright and he received no royalties.
Deeply in debt from the medical bills resulting from his wife's terminal illness
(she died about the time May created Rudolph), May persuaded Montgomery Ward's corporate president,
Sewell Avery, to turn the copyright over to him in January 1947.
With the rights in hand, May's financial security was assured.
"Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" was printed commercially in 1947 and shown
in theaters as a nine-minute cartoon the following year.
The Rudolph phenomenon really took off, however, when May's brother-in-law, songwriter Johnny Marks,
developed the lyrics and melody for a Rudolph song.
Marks' musical version of "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer," recorded by Gene Autry in 1949,
sold two million copies that year and went on to become one of the best-selling songs of all time, second only to "White Christmas."