Mrs. Claus
| Noinfo | yes |
| Image | ![]() |
| Caption | Illustration from a 1919 postcard depicting Mrs. Claus (right) placing a scarf on Santa before his journey begins |
| Aliases | Mrs. Santa Claus, Mrs. Santa, Mother Christmas, Mrs. Christmas, Mary Claus, Mary Christmas |
| Spouse | Santa Claus |
| Gender | Female |
| Species | Human |
| Occupation | Baker and reindeer herder |
| Lbl1 | Associates |
| Data1 | Elves ⋅ Reindeer |
| Lbl2 | Attire |
| Data2 | Mrs. Claus suit, long petticoat, lace cap |
| Home | North Pole (Santa's workshop) ⋅ Lapland (Santa Claus Village) |
Mrs. Claus, (also known as Mrs. Santa Claus, Mrs. Santa, Mother Christmas, Mrs. Christmas, Mary Claus or Mary Christmas) is the wife of Santa Claus, the Christmas gift-bringer in Western Christmas tradition.
Origins
The wife of Santa Claus is first mentioned in the short story "A Christmas Legend" (1849), by James Rees, a Philadelphia-based Christian missionary. In the story, an old man and woman, both carrying bundles on their backs, are given shelter in a home on Christmas Eve as weary travelers. The next morning, the children of the house find an abundance of gifts for them, and the couple is revealed to be not "old Santa Claus and his wife", but the hosts' long-lost elder daughter and her husband in disguise.
Mrs. Santa Claus is mentioned by name in the pages of the Yale Literary Magazine in 1851, where the student author (whose name is given only as "A. B.") writes of the appearance of Santa Claus at a Christmas party:
An account of a Christmas musicale at the State Lunatic Asylum in Utica, New York in 1854 included an appearance by Mrs. Santa Claus, with baby in arms, who danced to a holiday song.
A passing reference to Mrs. Santa Claus was made in an essay in Harper's Magazine in 1862; and in the comic novel The Metropolites (1864) by Robert St. Clar, she appears in a woman's dream, wearing "Hessian high boots, a dozen of short, red petticoats, an old, large, straw bonnet" and bringing the woman a wide selection of finery to wear.

A woman who may or may not be Mrs. Santa Claus appeared in the children's book Lill in Santa Claus Land and Other Stories by Ellis Towne, Sophie May and Ella Farman, published in Boston in 1878. In the story, little Lill describes her imaginary visit to Santa's office (not in the Arctic, incidentally):
Later, Lill's sister Effie ponders the tale:
Much as in The Metropolites, Mrs. Santa Claus appears in a dream of the author Eugene C. Gardner in his article "A Hickory Back-Log" in Good Housekeeping magazine (1887), with an even more detailed description of her dress:
Mrs. Claus proceeds to instruct the architect Gardner on the ideal modern kitchen, a plan of which he includes in the article.

Santa Claus' wife made her most active appearance yet by Katharine Lee Bates in her poem "Goody Santa Claus on a Sleigh Ride" (1889). "Goody" is short for "Goodwife", i.e., "Mrs."
20th century
The character recurred throughout mass media of the time, with notable literary examples including the 1914 one-act play Mrs. Santa Claus, Militant by Bell Elliott Palmer, the 1923 story The Great Adventure of Mrs. Santa Claus by Sarah Addington illustrated by Gertrude Kay, and the 1963 children's book How Mrs. Santa Claus Saved Christmas by Phyllis McGinley.
In popular recordings, Nat King Cole released the 1953 song "Mrs. Santa Claus" with accompaniment by Nelson Riddle's orchestra, while comedy duo Cheech and Chong had a hit with "Santa Claus and His Old Lady" in 1971.
On television, Mrs. Claus was voiced by Shirley Booth in the 1974 stop-action animated special The Year Without a Santa Claus, and portrayed by Angela Lansbury as the protagonist of the 1996 live-action musical Mrs. Santa Claus.
21st century
Boost Mobile created some controversy with a 2009 ad featuring Mrs. Claus. British company Marks & Spencer received positive attention for their 2016 marketing campaign based on a modern feminist interpretation of Mrs. Claus. In 2018, there was an increasing demand for holiday appearances of Mrs. Claus as a standalone character separate from Santa Claus.
In 2023, Sheryl Lee Ralph became the first celebrity and the first black woman to play Mrs. Claus in the history of the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.
''Peanuts'' interpretation
In It's Christmastime Again, Charlie Brown (1992), Charlie Brown tells his sister Sally, that some people call Santa's wife, Mary Christmas. Sally then gets out a new paper and writes; "Dear Mary Christmas, congratulations on deciding to keep your own name..."
According to IMDb, the quote was written in this way:
Sally: What was his name again?
Charlie Brown: Santa Claus.
Sally: Any middle initial?
Charlie Brown: No, I don't think so. At least I've never heard of one.
Sally: How about his wife? Do you know her name?
Charlie Brown: Well, sometimes you hear people say her name is Mary Christmas.
Sally: Really? That's very interesting. Maybe I'll write to her instead.
writing a yuletide greeting
Sally: Dear Mary Christmas, Congratulations on deciding to keep your own name...
See also
References
- 2024-12-17, The rise of Mother Christmas: why has Santa Claus suddenly been sidelined?, 2024-12-17, The Guardian, en-GB, 0261-3077
- 2021-12-12, live, Nat King Cole – Mrs. Santa Claus, 01musicfan, 21 December 2010, 22 May 2017, YouTube
- 2021-12-12, live, Cheech & Chong – Santa Claus and his Old Lady, YouTube, 27 August 2007
- Wheaton, Ken, Mrs. Claus Gets Frigid in Naughty Boost Mobile Ad | Advertising and Marketing Wisdom: Adages – Advertising Age, Adage.com, 2009-12-01, 5 December 2009
- The 2016 M&S Christmas advert about Santa's wife totally sleighs John Lewis, Metro.co.uk, Olivia Waring for, 2016-11-11, Metro, 2016-11-22
- 2022-01-12, subscription, live, All hail Mrs Claus! How the M&S Christmas ad went fully feminist, The Telegraph, 2016-11-22
- Ellis, Rebecca, This Year, Mrs. Claus Is Coming To Town – And Not As Santa's Sidekick, 25 December 2020, NPR, 22 December 2018, en
- Fans Can't Get Enough of Sheryl Lee Ralph as Thanksgiving Parade's First Black Mrs. Claus, Alyssa, Ray, November 23, 2023, Parade
Further reading
- Lill's Travels in Santa Claus Land, 1878, at Project Gutenberg
- Goody Santa Claus on a Sleigh-Ride, 1889, by Katherine Lee Bates, original edition and text.
External links
Mrs.
Category:Christmas characters
Category:Santa's helpers
Category:Christian folklore
Category:Fictional housewives
Category:Literary characters introduced in 1849
Category:Legendary Finnish people
Category:Female characters in literature
