Sunday, January 18, 2015

Snowman


It's funny about Snowman.  He's the horse who in 1956 went from having one hoof in a pet food can to being an elite show jumper, and very likely the only show jumper to ever make any impression on an American audience. His rags-to-riches story seems to have enabled him to make a slight dent in the extremely sturdy American indifference to horse shows.  Harness races were popular when everyone drove horses instead of cars. Thoroughbred racing was popular when we still associated wealth with beauty and glamor. Rodeos will always be popular because we are, at heart, all shit-kickers. But horse shows? Tweens riding Daddy's paycheck around a ring while Mommies Who Lunch applaud? You must be joking. 

Horse shows, in the hunter/jumper fashion, are elitist. It's an uncomfortable fit with the American sense of propriety, where every Trump pretends to be a self-made man. Of course, racing is even more elitist, but who can even bother being envious of people who own Bluegrass real estate? It's like envying the stars. Our real annoyance is with people whose homes block our view of the stars. And so we ignore show jumping. Completely.

Except for Snowman.  He had the charm of the underdog, plus the appeal of being an Ordinary Joe.  The photos of him being used as a giant pet by owner Harry de Leyer's children are more numerous than images of him competing at major horse shows.  







A sign of that interest is the fact that Snowman has had several books written about him.

  

The Story of Snowman, the Cinderella Horse by Tony Palazzo (1962)
















Snowman by Rutherford Montgomery (1967)



The Eight-Dollar Champion by Elizabeth Letts (2010)

And now, there's a documentary film being released:



Links
Harry & Snowman trailer
Elizabeth Letts website

3 comments:

Kate said...

One of my favorite books as a child, I wished to find my own Snowman! Will watch for the movie, looks wonderful.

Amie C. said...

I've missed this blog! I kind of lost track, but now I see that there are a bunch of new entries since last time I checked.

I'd never heard of Snowman before, but I wonder if he was the inspiration for Olympic (aka Blanco), the horse at the center of the Patsey Gray book "Horsepower" (published in 1966). Here's how Blanco is introduced in the first chapter:

"Audiences all over the west knew the big white gelding, the personality horse who stood seventeen hands high."

Olympic/Blanco is beloved for his gentle manners and overall lighthearted aspect as he goes about his business of racking up trophies and prize money. The plot of the book revolves around the champion suffering a sort of breakdown due to overwork and needing to be nursed back to health by a devoted junior member of the stable crew.

Amie C. said...

I've missed this blog! I kind of lost track, but now I see that there are a bunch of new entries since last time I checked.

I'd never heard of Snowman before, but I wonder if he was the inspiration for Olympic (aka Blanco), the horse at the center of the Patsey Gray book "Horsepower" (published in 1966). Here's how Blanco is introduced in the first chapter:

"Audiences all over the west knew the big white gelding, the personality horse who stood seventeen hands high."

Olympic/Blanco is beloved for his gentle manners and overall lighthearted aspect as he goes about his business of racking up trophies and prize money. The plot of the book revolves around the champion suffering a sort of breakdown due to overwork and needing to be nursed back to health by a devoted junior member of the stable crew.