Lee Mendelson, Producer of ‘Peanuts’ TV Specials, Dies at 86

The executive producer of 'A Charlie Brown Christmas' reportedly died on Christmas Day, following a long battle with cancer.

Lee Mendelson
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Image via Getty/Beck Starr/WireImage

Lee Mendelson

Lee Mendelson, best known as the executive producer of A Charlie Brown Christmas, died in his Bay Area home on Christmas Day. He was 86 years old.

Mendelson's son, Jason Mendelson, confirmed the tragic news to CNN on Friday, stating his father died of congestive heart failure following a battle with lung cancer.

"We are very sad to lose our wonderful father, but Lee would have said it was serendipitous to pass on Christmas when the song he wrote with Vince Guaraldi is being heard everywhere and the program he created with Charles Schulz and Bill Melendez is being celebrated around the world," the younger Mendelson said in reference to the "Christmas Time Is Here" track written for A Charlie Brown Christmas special.

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Mendelson began working in television in 1961 when he landed a gig at San Francisco's KPIX-TV. About a couple of years later, he started his Lee Mendelson Productions and formed a long-lasting relationship with Peanuts creator Charles Schultz and voice actor/animator Bill Melendez. Mendelson would go on to produce more than 50 specials featuring Charlie Brown and the Peanuts gang, including It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown, A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving, and, most recently, It's Your 50th Christmas, Charlie Brown (2015). Mendelson won his 12th Emmy award for the latter special; the six of those dozen were for Peanuts-related work.

The Stanford graduate also produced TV programs for the Garfield and Cathy comic strips, as well as a number of documentaries, including Travels with Charley, The Innocent Fair, and A Man Named Mays.

Mendelson is survived by his wife, Ploenta; his kids Jason, Glenn, Lynda, and Sean; and eight grandchildren.

Read some of the tributes for the prolific producer below.

RIP Lee Mendelson,the man who helped Bill Melendez and Charles Shultz produce many of the Peanuts specials and animated films that were made. Thank all three of you for contributing to some of my favorite animated works ever. pic.twitter.com/60uvnJGgwQ

— MarshDog (@AnimaticPsycho) December 27, 2019

I’m sad to hear that Lee Mendelson passes away at the age of 86. Along with Bill Melendez, he was responsible for helping bring Peanuts and Garfield into animation and has a huge legacy of award winning animated TV specials. I’ll really miss him. pic.twitter.com/e38smuJGUY

— Animated Antic (@Animated_Antic) December 27, 2019

#RIP, Lee Mendelson. Thank you for our childhoods❤️ pic.twitter.com/h9rJGrnAde

— Chase Masterson 😳 (@ChaseMasterson) December 27, 2019

Lee Mendelson changed Christmas forever when he produced A Charlie Brown Christmas.
What a day to go out on.
Prayers to his family and close friends. We lost an important figure in television history.

— ToonrificTariq ☠️ (@ToonrificTariq) December 28, 2019

I had the opportunity to spend time with Lee Mendelson in the early days of #ThePeanutsMovie. He had so many incredible stories about working with Charles Schulz and Bill Melendez on the classic specials. It was an honor to get to know him. RIP to one of the greats. pic.twitter.com/dedlo8NPGP

— John Cohen (@JohnCohen1) December 27, 2019

So Lee Mendelson, The executive Producer of the peanuts specials died on the 25th of December 2019 at the age of 86 from Lung Cancer.
This is sad on its own but this now means the the 3 creators of the specials are all dead

R.I.P Charles, Lee, and Bill. U won't be forgotten. pic.twitter.com/qrCD6yO82U

— Superadam10 is a Rapunzel Simp (@Superadam101) December 27, 2019

RIP Lee Mendelson. Thank you for some great childhood memories. #Peanuts #CharlieBrown pic.twitter.com/8pCnzktWVY

— Vince 22 (@VinceG222) December 27, 2019

Lee Mendelson produced A Charlie Brown Christmas (the first of so many Peanuts specials) and he died two days ago, on Christmas. I can’t tell if this is a hug or a big middle finger from the universe. Either way, sir, thanks for my childhood.

— AC Wheeler (@WheelerIII) December 27, 2019

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