NEW YORK â Charlie Brown and Snoopy go to sleepaway camp in a new, bittersweet Apple TV+ special fueled by a pair of Emmy Award-nominated songwriters that's being billed as the first âPeanutsâ musical in 35 years.
âMy motivation has always been to preserve and enhance my dadâs legacy,â says co-writer Craig Schulz, a son of the iconic comic strip âPeanutsâ creator Charles. S. Schulz. âSo itâs really an honor to get to play with these kids.â
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âSnoopy Presents: A Summer Musical,â which premieres Friday, features five songs â two by Jeff Morrow, Alan Zachary and Michael Weiner â and three by Ben Folds.
âIf someone asked me to write for a stupid kids thing, I would find it difficult because I donât like talking down to anyone, much less kids,â says Folds. â'Peanuts' isn't like that. Weâre working in very rich, fertile soil.â
What's the special about?
The special opens with the kids getting ready to catch the bus to Cloverhill Ranch camp, but Sally isn't so sure it's going to be great. "Honestly, big brother, I could stay home," she says.
Sally is initially intimidated by the camp's inside jokes and rituals, turned off by the insects, the endless climbing, no TV, cold lake water and lumpy beds.
âYou wake at dawn/Like you would in jail,â she sings in the song âA Place Like This.â âThe foodâs not what youâd call upscale/This whole endeavor, an epic fail/And thatâs being diplomatic.â
Trust âPeanutsâ to explore reluctance to leave home and fear of change. Craig Schulz, who co-wrote the script with his son, Bryan, and Cornelius Uliano, channeled some of his own childhood.
âCloverhill Ranch actually is a take-off of the one in Santa Rosa called Cloverleaf that I went to as a child and hated. I bailed out after a week and went home,â he says. âSo many connections in the film kind of date back to my childhood that we weaved into the film.â
While Sally warms to camp, Snoopy discovers what he thinks is a treasure map that will transform him into a wealthy pooch, one who will lay on top of a gold dog house. And Charlie Brown learns that this summer will be the last for his beloved but struggling camp â unless he does something.
âI guess your generation would rather sit in front of the television than sit under the stars,â he tells Sally. âWe have to protect these kinds of places because once theyâre gone, theyâre gone forever.â
A concert to save the camp
Charlie Brown comes up with the idea to invite generations of camp-goers back for a fundraising concert, but the skies darken on the big day, threatening to cancel the event and sending him into a âGood griefâ spiral.
âCharlie Brown is different in this special,â says director Erik Wiese. âHeâs really happy. He loves this place. And so thatâs why when we get to that scene itâs so effective because he returned back to the zero we sort of know him traditionally.â
Folds supplies the lovely, last three songs â âWhen We Were Light,â âLook Up, Charlie Brownâ and âLeave It Betterâ â and credits his songwriting collaborators for setting the stage.
âI entered when those first two songs existed, and I get to just sort of step in at the point where things get really complex and melancholic,â he says.
Folds has had a flirtation with musical theater before, having written the âPeanutsâ Earth Day song âItâs the Small Things, Charlie Brownâ in 2022 and a few songs for the movie âOver the Hedgeâ in 2006.
âPeople can easily confuse a song that sounds like musical theater with a song that should be musical theater,â he says. âReally what the value of the song is that it obviates the need for a good five to 10 pages of script.â
This October marks the 75th anniversary of âPeanuts,â and the musical arrives with a boatload of branding, from tote bags by Coach to shoes by Crocs and Starbucks mugs.
Craig Schulz is already at work on a second animated musical with his son, having long ago fallen in love with the family business.
"I used to always wonder how in the world my dad could go to the office every day for 50 years and write a comic strip every day," he says, comparing it to the âI Love Lucyâ episode with Lucy trying to keep up with a chocolate conveyor belt.
âThen I came to realize that he had his family of five kids, but I really think he enjoyed going to the studio and working with the âPeanutsâ characters even more so than his real family. He got to go in there and embrace them, draw them, make him happy, sad, whatever. It was a world that I donât think he could ever leave.â