9 / 10
Meet Me in St. Louis is Vincente Minnelli’s 1944 American musical depicting the upper-middle-class Smith family in St. Louis from summer 1903 through the spring 1904 opening of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, with the father’s announcement of a forced move to New York producing a Christmas-season family crisis. Judy Garland plays Esther Smith. Margaret O’Brien plays Tootie Smith. Mary Astor plays Anna Smith. Lucille Bremer plays Rose Smith. Leon Ames plays Alonzo Smith. Tom Drake plays John Truett. The screenplay was written by Irving Brecher and Fred F. Finklehoffe from Sally Benson’s New Yorker short stories collected as 5135 Kensington. MGM released the film in November 1944 to enormous commercial success, becoming the studio’s biggest hit since Gone with the Wind.
The film is a Christmas film only by accident. The Christmas season occupies less than a third of the running time, but Garland’s performance of ‘Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas’ to comfort Tootie before what they believe will be their last St. Louis Christmas has become one of the most consequential Christmas songs in American popular music. Minnelli’s structure follows the seasons rather than a conventional plot. Each season gets a chapter card showing a tintype of the family home in that season’s weather, and the film’s emotional arc tracks the rising stakes of the family’s potential displacement against the cyclical reassurance of holidays returning each year in the same house.
Judy Garland’s ‘Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas’
Hugh Martin and Ralph Blane wrote the song originally with darker lyrics than the released version. The first draft included ‘Have yourself a merry little Christmas / It may be your last / Next year we may all be living in the past’. Garland refused to perform those lyrics, calling them too sad to give Margaret O’Brien’s Tootie. Martin revised the lyrics for the film, and the song became one of the most enduring Christmas standards.
Garland sings the song to a weeping Tootie sitting on her sister’s bed, with the family’s future uncertain and the Christmas tree shimmering through the window. The performance carries the entire film’s emotional weight. Minnelli holds the shot, lets Garland do the work, and resists every cutting opportunity. The restraint is the scene’s craft.
For Writers
Songs delivered as comfort to grieving characters bypass conventional narrative emotion. Garland’s lullaby for Tootie carries the family’s full vulnerability through a song the audience hears as the character does.
Margaret O’Brien’s Performance
Margaret O’Brien was seven during production. Her Tootie is one of the great child performances in American cinema. The character must carry both the family’s youngest-child charm and a much darker undercurrent visible in Tootie’s obsession with her dolls dying, her plans for funerals, and her terrifying solo expedition through Halloween night to throw flour at a feared neighbor.
The Halloween sequence is the film’s strangest and best passage. Tootie crosses neighborhood lawns alone, screaming through a costume, throwing flour at the door of the local boogeyman, and running back as the neighborhood children declare her the bravest. The sequence has no real plot function. It exists because childhood fear is real and Sally Benson’s source stories remembered it. O’Brien received a juvenile Academy Award for the role.
For Writers
Films about families benefit from giving each child genuine separate inner life rather than collective family-child function. Tootie’s death-obsessions and Halloween bravery are unrelated to the move-to-New-York plot and stronger for being unrelated.
Minnelli’s Color and Composition
Meet Me in St. Louis was Minnelli’s third film and his first major Technicolor production. The color design draws on tintype photography and turn-of-the-century commercial illustration. Each season has its own palette. Winter’s deep blues and reds for the snowman destruction scene work as both seasonal accuracy and emotional registration.
Minnelli used the Technicolor process to push warmth at the edges of compositions rather than only at centers. The Smith family kitchen, dining room, and front parlor all glow in ways that distinguish the production from the harsher Technicolor of period musicals shot at other studios. The visual signature would carry through Minnelli’s subsequent career and informs the look of his later films including An American in Paris and The Band Wagon.
For Writers
Color design in period musicals can build emotional registration through palette shifts that track the story’s seasonal or emotional arc rather than only describing the setting.
Craft Note
Garland was twenty-one during production and her relationship with Minnelli began on set. They married a year after release. Garland’s career was at a turning point: the 1939 Wizard of Oz had made her as MGM’s top property, the 1944 Meet Me in St. Louis cemented her musical-romantic-lead status, and the late 1940s would bring the substance abuse problems that ended her studio contract. The film captures her at her warmest before that decline began.
Verdict
Meet Me in St. Louis is one of the finest American musicals and a genuine Christmas film through Garland’s title song alone. The seasonal structure and Margaret O’Brien’s Tootie give the film weight that musical-comedy structure usually does not carry. A primary text for the genre.
FAQ
Who directed Meet Me in St. Louis?
Vincente Minnelli directed the film. He went on to direct An American in Paris, The Band Wagon, and Gigi, among other major musicals.
Is the film based on a book?
Yes. The source is Sally Benson’s collected New Yorker stories, published in 1942 as 5135 Kensington. The stories were autobiographical based on Benson’s St. Louis childhood.
Why are the ‘Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas’ lyrics different from the song everyone knows?
The film version is closer to the original Hugh Martin lyrics. The Frank Sinatra recording from 1957 used further-softened lyrics that became the standard radio version.
Did the film win Academy Awards?
Margaret O’Brien received a juvenile Academy Award. The film received four nominations including Best Original Score but won no competitive Oscars.
Where was Meet Me in St. Louis filmed?
Entirely on MGM soundstages in Culver City, California. The Smith family house exterior was a substantial set built on the studio backlot.
How did Meet Me in St. Louis perform commercially?
The film was MGM’s biggest hit since Gone with the Wind, grossing over five million dollars in 1944.
What is the film’s rating?
Meet Me in St. Louis is unrated. The modern equivalent would be G.