Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Want a hippo? One girl got one

Singer reflects on her catchy Christmas tune

- JOHN ROGERS ASSOCIATED PRESS

Los Angeles — All a cute, curly haired 10-year-old girl named Gayla Peevey wanted for Christmas in 1953 was a hippopotam­us.

And amazingly enough, after “I Want a Hippopotam­us For Christmas” became the biggest hit song of that holiday season, she actually got one, a 700-pound baby named Matilda. She promptly donated it to the Oklahoma City Zoo, where it lived to be nearly 50, a ripe old age for hippos.

As for Peevey’s song, it may never die.

“That one just really took off, and it’s still going strong, stronger than ever. Sixty-three years later! Hard to believe,” Peevey, an ebullient woman of 73, said during a recent phone interview from her San Diego-area home.

So much so that it’s used as a cellphone ringtone these days, included on holiday ornaments and Christmas cards, available for download on iTunes. It’s even featured in a U.S. Postal Service commercial in which the post office boasts it ships more online gifts, hippopotam­uses included, than anybody.

For years, Peevey has been hearing from schoolteac­hers around the world who tell her their students perform the song and can’t get enough of it.

“Over 15 years now we’ve done it, and I don’t think we’re stopping,” said Dana Caro, who directs the second-grade Christmas music program at a suburban southern California school.

And who knows, singing it may actually get a kid a hippo. Unlikely, perhaps, but it did get one for Peevey.

Her hometown zoo, hippoless at the time, teamed with the local newspaper to encourage people to send in enough money to buy her one after she debuted the song on television’s “The Ed Sullivan Show.”

Three thousand dollars later, Matilda arrived on Christmas Eve, a fitting gift for someone who would so enthusiast­ically declare, “No crocodiles, no rhinoceros­es. I only like hippopotam­uses. And hippopotam­uses like me, too.”

Soon after, however, Peevey left her hippopotam­us behind, moving to California.

She had been singing profession­ally for two years before recording “Hippo,” moving up from local watermelon festivals to radio shows and then a spot on television’s “Saturday Night Revue” hosted by Hoagy Carmichael.

But her hippo fame caught her off guard, and for months afterward she couldn’t move around Oklahoma City without being mobbed by fans. Her parents figured she’d blend in as just another “normal kid” in California while recording a few more songs.

None would have the impact of that first one, written by John Rox and personally selected for Peevey by Columbia Records’ legendary producer and A&R man Mitch Miller, who backed her with his orchestra.

She did resurface briefly in 1959 with “My Little Marine,” an aching teen ballad she’d written about her first crush. She recorded it under the name Jamie Horton, her manager not wanting people to dismiss it as another hippo song. It peaked at No. 84 on Billboard’s Hot 100.

“A hit but not a big hit,” she says now. “Certainly not a hit as big as the hippopotam­us song.”

Soon after, she was off to college, then marriage and motherhood. Eventually she founded her own advertisin­g agency, keeping her hand in music writing commercial jingles.

Retired and married for 53 years now, she still sings regularly in church.

“But not the hippo song,” Peevey says, laughing. “It’s not really a church song.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gayla Peevey, singer of the enduring holiday classic “I Want a Hippopotam­us For Christmas,” stands in her home next to an image she drew of a hippopotam­us.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Gayla Peevey, singer of the enduring holiday classic “I Want a Hippopotam­us For Christmas,” stands in her home next to an image she drew of a hippopotam­us.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Peevey’s song is available on iTunes and still heard during the holidays.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Peevey’s song is available on iTunes and still heard during the holidays.

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