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  1. Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer is a fictional reindeer created by Robert L. May. Rudolph is usually depicted as the ninth and youngest of Santa Claus's reindeer, using his luminous red nose to lead the reindeer team and guide Santa's sleigh on Christmas Eve. Though he initially receives ridicule for his nose as a fawn, the brightness of his ...

    • Al Kasha and Michael Lloyd
    • Tom Hok
    • William R. Kowalchuk
    • Michael Aschner
  2. Dec 16, 2013 · The character 'Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer' was created by a father to bring comfort to his daughter as her mother was dying of cancer. Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer was created by a man whose ...

  3. Dec 16, 2016 · Yes, all four were real contenders. Robert May, the author of the original story, clearly knew he wanted an "R" name and tinkered around with a few other options before landing on Rudolph. I think ...

    • Morgan Baila
  4. Dec 22, 2022 · The spoken-word recording was, too. And quickly several Rudolph products and toys were put on the market. The Song. In 1948, May enlisted his brother-in-law, Johnny Marks, to write a song. The ...

    • Jacob Uitti
    • 3 min
    • Senior Writer
    • Stacy Conradt
    • Rudolph was created for Montgomery Ward. In 1939, execs for the Montgomery Ward department store decided they needed a character for the freebie coloring books they were handing out to kids who visited Santa.
    • The writer who created Rudolph was grieving the loss of his wife. Robert May, a copywriter for Montgomery Ward’s mail order catalog division, was the employee tasked with writing a story and creating a marketable character for the coloring book.
    • Rudolph could have been Rollo or Reginald instead. Other names were considered before May settled on the name we know today. Rollo was rejected for sounding too sunny and happy; Reginald sounded too British.
    • Robert May's original Rudolph story is a bit different than the song. In the story May told in that original coloring book, Santa finds Rudolph while delivering presents to the reindeer village.
  5. Feb 21, 2023 · According to a 1963 interview, May thought Rudolph "rolled off the tongue nicely." The name Rudolph described a lonely outcast of a reindeer, one shunned by all the other reindeer because of his glowing red nose. "It was his opinion of himself that gave rise to Rudolph, I think," May's daughter, Barbara May Lewis, told NPR.

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  7. Nov 30, 2022 · Others, though, think the names depend on how much they fit within the poem’s rhythm. The eight original reindeer from Clement Moore’s poem are Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen, Comet, Cupid, Donner, and Blitzen. Most of them come from German, with Donner and Blitzen — also known as Dunder and Blixem — meaning “thunder” and ...

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