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Nancy
Naigle and Hallmark Give Us Christmas Joy![]() |
This Christmas season the Hallmark Channel in the United States and the
W Channel in Canada are debuting two new Christmas movies,
Christmas Joy and
Hope At Christmas, both of
which are based on romance novels written by Nancy Naigle, a USA Today
Bestselling Author. The affable
Virginian who now makes her home in North Carolina was on the film set
for both movies earlier this year and when she sat down with Riveting
Riffs Magazine she was effusive about the actors, the production crew
and the completed movies.
This writer read Christmas Joy
and did not want to put the book down, because the storylines and the
characters were so well developed that you felt like you knew them
personally.
Joy Holbrook one of the two main characters in Christmas Joy learns that
her Aunt Ruby in Crystal Falls has been injured from an accident and so
Joy travels from her high profile job in the big city to the small town
of Crystal Falls to help out with feeding her aunt’s farm animals, do
some Christmas decorating and help out with Molly. You will not see the
little girl Molly in the movie edition, but as Nancy Naigle says it is
difficult to condense 70,000 or 80,000 words contained in a novel into a
movie script of approximately 20,000 words.
“The Christmas story came from me. As a career girl (She was a
Vice-President with a financial institution) for a lot of years I was
really proud (of my career) and I missed a lot of birthdays, I missed a
lot of family time and it wasn’t until I hit forty and I started opening
my eyes to the kinds of things I was missing that I realized how
important those things were that I would never get back.
Joy’s character is much younger than I was, but the whole idea behind
that story was that she was a professional girl and she was very good at
her job. Her aunt (Ruby) needed her help. She had this big promotional
opportunity right at her fingertips and being there to handhold that and
hopefully make that happen was important to her. I wanted her to make
the right decision, so it turned out good for her.
That is where the whole story started.
Of course, in most of my books if you look close enough, there is a goat
mentioned somewhere. Aunt Ruby having some goats and stuff was not out
of the question. Some of my love
for farm animals comes through everywhere, but I thought it would be fun
with her living in D.C. I was born and raised in Virginia and people
would go oh yes I have been to Arlington, Virginia and that is so
different from the part of Virginia that I lived in. She is working in
this big city in D.C. and she is going to go back to Crystal Falls to
help her aunt. She thinks it will be a piece of cake and she can handle
all of this marketing stuff and she can also handle a few animals and
whatever else is coming her way. It is harder than she thinks.
In the book there is the little girl Molly who adds a whole new
dimension to the book too. She is not in the movie.
The movie works perfectly without it, but I think people are going to
love reading those pieces in the book. I think she is an awesome
character and I love Molly. There is that wide eyed bewilderment (about
Christmas) and the snowflake kisses. Those things are so simple, but
they make a big difference in her life. I love the story of Molly. I
don’t have children of mine own, so writing that is my extra special
little thing. I had stepchildren and they were teenagers when I raised
them with my husband. He passed away in 2014 and my stepchildren are in
their thirties. My fiancé now has a little six year old and those things
in the book are things that I am experiencing with him for the first
time. It has been such a delight. Oh my gosh.
Then there is Ben Andrews. How would you like to meet the future love of
your life by running into his vehicle? Come on, that is hardly a
spoiler. This is a romance novel and a Hallmark movie. You can see this
one coming from a mile away. The suspense is always in how it is going
to happen, not if it is going to happen.
Naigle says, “Ben worked in the city before. His parents were getting
older and he realized he wanted to come back to Crystal Falls and so he
does and he works as the hospital administrator. He still does
woodworking in his garage and he still helps his parents. In his home he
is matching all the cornices and the woodwork. He is detail oriented. He
is an all-around good guy. I love his relationship with the other guys
in town.
There are some things you will (read) in the book that you won’t see in
the movie that I think make him a more well-rounded character.”
About Christmas Joy, the movie Nancy Naigle says, “I was on set and it
was so beautiful, lovely and so well done.
It was the first moment that I was able to say with a one hundred
percent certainty you want to read the book and you want to see the
movie, because both bring different pieces of it to life.”
On the set when we were in Pitt Meadows in British Columbia (Canada) and
during the (scene) when Joy found the ornament from her mom and Ben is
talking he ends up breaking the ornament. It is a big moment in the
book. As I watched them film that when he dropped that ornament I just
cried. It was exactly how I had seen it in my head. It is almost a
little frightening and you think oh my God this has been private in my
head for three or four years now and I just watched it happen just like
I thought.
I had the same feeling too when they started decorating the tree. They
started the snow machines outside and the snow started wafting around
me, while I was watching on the video, as the two of them were hanging
the balls on the tree. I almost felt like I was pulled into this scene
and like it really happened to me. I know it didn’t, because I made it
up. It was real. It was emotional and I cried a lot on set and I cried
when I watched the movie. My mama and I watched it together. We laughed,
we giggled, I teared up and I cried. At the very end of the movie the
house that they are standing in front of has almost a manger shape to
it. They are standing there together with their heads tilted towards
each other. They start panning to the sky and the beautiful Mariah Carey
(rendition) of “Joy To the Word,” (starts to play). Probably half the
people will have flipped away from the channel, while the credits are
rolling, but if you keep watching (Editor’s
Note: We decided not to include the rest of the quote, because it would
spoil it for those watching the movie).”
In a society that seems to move at an increasingly quick pace and with
films and television programs that seem more focused on entertaining for
the short term than they do on substance, sitting down to read a novel
seems almost a thing of the past. Yet, here we are talking to Nancy
Naigle who has a solid core of ardent fans who eagerly devour each new
book that she authors, about another couple who meet, fall in love and
who either live in or visit some small town. It therefore, seems quite
appropriate to pose the question to Naigle, why are your books so
successful?
With a soft, cheery voice that is often sprinkled with light laughter or
a giggle she says, “I don’t know. I think television and movies have so
many things that just would never have made it to a screen before, so I
think people get desensitized to special little things.
Maybe they think they are too
little. Gosh now a teen doesn’t even go to prom without some big
promposal. In the past you might hear about a proposal for a wedding or
a marriage proposal that was really over the top, but kids are doing
that for prom these days. I think oh my gosh you are wasting all of your
good stuff, before you even need it.
For a lot of people it is little simple things that mean the most. They
are sincere and they don’t have to cost a lot of money. They are just
caring and kind. I think that it is refreshing and it might seem old
fashioned to some people. Maybe I am old fashioned (she laughs). I don’t
have the answer for that. There is nothing wrong with sweet, gentleness,
being kind and caring. It is sad to say that when you see it, it feels
refreshing. It should be an everyday part of our lives, right?”
That explains the romantic part and the goodhearted characters that are
in Nancy Naigle’s books, but what about the small town settings,
especially with a North American demographic that continues to trend
more towards large urban centers than it does rural and small town
environments?
“I grew up in Virginia Beach and that is not really a small town. One of
our biggest naval bases is right there. I worked in Charlotte. I had
some bigger city exposure traveling with the bank to Chicago, Los
Angeles and Dallas, but I have always had a real affection for small
towns. No matter where I have been I loved driving through the small
towns and discovering the little shops and little diners. Every story
that I write is a mishmash of little towns I have visited. It doesn’t
matter where they are, small towns have that same feeling everywhere
that you go. I just have a real love for small towns.
I think it is the slower pace. When you jump into the books that are set
in small towns you take on the smaller town pace. I hope the books bring
people a breath of fresh air. That certainly was the case for me when my
(late) husband and I moved out to a little town in Hinton County
Virginia, where we had an eighty-eight acre goat farm. I worked in high
tech, big business every day and I was on conference calls around the
world. I would step outside and sixty goats would run to the fence. If
it was kidding season we might have a hundred kids (baby goats) on the
ground it was a whole different feeling. I could literally feel the
stress fall away and that is what I hope to achieve with the books. If
someone walks into that book with a feeling of anxiety over an
ex-husband or a job, a child, a problem or a sickness when they are
opening those pages, getting into those characters and becoming friends
with those characters they are getting that feeling of I can breathe,”
she says.
As for the inspiration for her characters Nancy Naigle says, “They come
from all over. Some of them like the characters in
Sweet Tea and Secrets (set in
Adams Grove, Virginia) with Pearl (Clemmons) who is the old matriarch of
the town she was my great grandma Amy who was such a hoot. She would
take my mom and me out to lunch and she would put a piece of parsley
behind her ear. She would try and fix my mom up with the waiter. She was
a say what’s on her mind kind of a girl. I just love her and I love old
people.
I was on Princess Cruise’s Book Club Pick a few years ago, so I got to
go on a cruise to Alaska.
While we were on that cruise we did some excursions and one of those
excursions was a beautiful glass blowing excursion. I think it was to
Skagway, Alaska. The young man who taught us glass blowing and helped us
to make our beautiful artwork was kind of hippieish and a nice guy. When
he was teaching me I teased him and I said this is sexier than that
moment in Ghost when they
were doing the pottery (she laughs). We laughed and laughed and he is
the one who inspired the character in my novel
Until Tomorrow that has the
Alaskan glassblower. You never know who you are going to bump into that
gives you a spark or makes you feel good and you want to share.”
As for the central male character Kevin MacAlea, Naigle says, “I wanted
him to be called Mac and that is why he got MacAlea. He is every single
dad who has ever had to take on all of that responsibility. I will tell
you between the movie and the book there is a difference, because he is
not a single dad (in the movie). He is (still) a single guy. There are
definitely differences between the book and the movie. The guy is still
a good guy. He is a teacher. He is caring and he works with his hands.
He is very close with his mom. Even though there are a lot of changes
between the movie and the book when I read the whole script I was really
happy with where it went. I
think readers will love the book, because there is so much more to it,
but they will still love the story on the television.”
Hope at Christmas is set in a small town called Hopewell. Nancy Naigle
describes the town that she created, “It is the kind of a town where
everybody who goes to the diner knows each other and where the people
walking down the streets really are going hey John, how are you?
Everybody knows each other and you don’t see people just walking down
the street and passing each other without saying a word. It was fun for
me when I was on the set and they were doing one of the scenes when
Sydney and Rayanne (Erica Tremblay) are walking down Main Street near
the Cookie Dough Bakery and they are offered a cookie on the street.
The extras were walking down the
street and I was so delighted that the extras were being told what to do
and that they greeted each other. That is exactly how it was in my book,
in my heart and in my head. People were interacting with each other and
it wasn’t just people moving down the street it was people living and
(talking to each other), as they moved down the street. It caught that
perfectly.”
As a nod to Nancy Naigle’s brilliant writing and how highly Hallmark and
Crown Media think of her, she was asked to do a novelization of a movie
that was already aired in 2017 and 2018,
Christmas In Evergreen.
“It was a Hallmark original movie last year and Hallmark approached me
to do the novelization for that movie. I wrote the novel for
Christmas In Evergreen and it
came out this past July, so it could go with the movie they already had.
It was backwards, but super fun for me. I thought when they asked me to
do this that they were going to send me the script and that it would be
a piece of cake. What I didn’t realize was the script is 20,000 words
and that is it. I needed to turn in this 50,000 or 75,000 word book from
this 20,000 word script. It was a lot more work than I thought it was
going to be, but it was also a different kind of work. It gave me a huge
new point of view of how to watch the movie and then turn it back into a
story. I really enjoyed it. They also asked me to do the novelization
for Christmas In Evergreen
Letters to Santa, which comes out this year. I will be writing that
during the first quarter and it will come out next July. I assumed at
first it was going to be a continuation of the first
Christmas In Evergreen movie,
but this is a whole different story. I am really excited and I think it
will be fun.
The guy is driving grandpa’s truck in that movie and I want to know how
he got grandpa’s truck. Allie is in the movie still, so there are some
tie ins to the old movie. It is a fabulous cast anyway and Barbara Niven
and Ashley Williams are in the movie again. I am excited to see what the
new story is going to be. I have no idea and I have only seen the
previews. I will probably watch it forty-five times just like I did with
the first one. I watched it
over and over and over again, plus they sent me the script and they send
you what they call their last script, but it doesn’t always match
exactly to the movie. I found myself doing a lot of editing to make sure
that it matched the movie and then found out where I could add some
additional back stories that didn’t change the movie at all, but would
give the readers more detail about the characters. Then I get to write
an epilogue or what happened after the movie and that is a lot of fun.”
Nancy Naigle won a fan in Riveting Riffs Magazine, because of her
brilliant storytelling and at a time when there seems to be so much
turmoil in the world, her characters who are influenced by real people,
remind us of the things, the values and the relationships that really
are important in life. Treat yourself this Christmas season to
purchasing Nancy Naigle’s Christmas Joy and Hope At Christmas. In fact,
you will enjoy reading these books anytime of the year. You can purchase
Nancy Naigle’s novels through most major online retailers. Please take
time to
visit the website for Nancy Naigle.
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