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The surprising origins of 'Santaland Diaries,' an NPR tradition now in its 30th year

This year marks the 30th anniversary since David Sedaris' "Santaland Diaries" first aired on <em>Morning Edition</em>.
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This year marks the 30th anniversary since David Sedaris' "Santaland Diaries" first aired on Morning Edition.

Updated December 23, 2022 at 6:06 AM ET

It's been 30 years since Morning Edition listeners first met a very un-merry Christmas elf named Crumpet from Santaland Diaries, the somewhat fanciful story of David Sedaris' time working as a Macy's department store elf.

Santaland Diaries catapulted Sedaris into a career as a best-selling author and playwright. Before that, he had been a struggling writer who occasionally read his work in nightclubs.

Listen: David Sedaris Reads "Santaland Diaries"

This American Life's Ira Glass, then an independent producer, had seen him onstage in Chicago.

"I ... always had thought, from the very first time I'd heard you read, 'Oh, this guy would be great on the radio,' " Glass told Sedaris in a 2017 conversation on Morning Edition marking the 25th anniversary. "I was always intimidated to approach you to ask you to record it because so many of your early stories are from the point of view of somebody who is nice to people when they need them but very mean underneath. So I was just always a little scared of you."

Glass recorded the original reading from NPR's New York Bureau. And as Sedaris read it, Glass says he knew it was something special.

"I remember we got to the part where you sing like Billie Holiday — and I had no idea that you were just going to like break out into song and sound exactly like Billie Holiday," Glass says. "I was a pretty experienced radio producer at that point, and I was like, 'This is a good one.'"

For Sedaris, then 35, the response was life changing.

"Just immediately after it ended my phone started ringing with opportunities," he tells Glass.

And because his name was in the phone book, he says he got all kinds of calls – from editors, old friends and from strangers, including a telephone operator.

"She was late for work because she sitting in her car listening to it," he recalled. "And then she went into the phone company to start her job and she called me."

That 1992 reading on Morning Edition was "like someone had flipped a switch," he says:

"And they said 'OK, the second part of your life is going to start in seven minutes. So just get ready.' "

Morning Edition airs the reading every year, and for many, hearing Sedaris as Crumpet the elf has itself become a holiday tradition.

"I realize you're lucky if you have one thing that people appreciate," Sedaris said. "You are a lucky, lucky person."

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Barry Gordemer is an award-winning producer, editor, and director for NPR's Morning Edition. He's helped produce and direct NPR coverage of two Persian Gulf wars, eight presidential elections, the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, and hurricanes Katrina and Harvey. He's also produced numerous profiles of actors, musicians, and writers.
Heidi Glenn has been the Washington Desk’s digital editor since 2022, and at NPR since 2007, when she was hired as the National Desk’s digital producer. In between she has served as Morning Edition’s lead digital editor, helping the show’s audio stories find life online.
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