That 'Christmas Story' Frozen-Tongue Scene: The Inside Scoop on the Triple Dog Dare

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(Warner Bros.)

This story was originally published on Dec. 21, 2015.

Yes, it really was cold. Yes, it really was a flagpole. And, no, you shouldn’t try the trick at home.

If Scott Schwartz sounds well-rehearsed in telling the story behind the story of his famous tongue-stuck-to-the-frozen-flagpole scene from A Christmas Story, then that’s probably because he is.

“I get calls every year from [reporters], ‘Hey, we got a kid that stuck his tongue to a pole. Can you give us a comment?’” Schwartz says. “I go, ‘Yeah, he’s a schmuck.’”

Schwartz, now 47 and president of the child-actor advocacy group, A Minor Consideration, played a schmuck by the name of Flick in A Christmas Story, the nostalgic, 1940s-set film that, while briefly a No. 1 box-office hit, made its Yuletide reputation as an 24-hour-marathon cable offering.

Looking back, Schwartz estimates he worked for all of about six weeks on the movie, which was shot in the winter of 1983. Age 14 at the time (but looking years younger), Schwartz came to the set a veteran actor, with a Richard Pryor movie, 1982’s The Toy, on his résumé.

Cast as Flick, loyal friend of aspiring Red Ryder BB-gun owner Ralphie (Peter Billingsley), Schwartz traveled with the production to the now-closed Victoria School, in Ontario, Canada. The classroom scenes were shot there. So was the flagpole scene.

If you’ve gotten this far — in this article, or in this century — without knowing what the flagpole scene is, then you need to get yourself in front of a screen that’s screening A Christmas Story.

Watch the full scene:

In a movie filled with oft-referenced moments — the leg lamp, the “You’ll shoot your eye out!” taunt, the pink bunny outfit — the flagpole scene just might reign supreme. It’s a spot-on distillation of schoolyard politics, an example of how things get out of hand quickly and painfully: Flick, on the triple-dog dare of another of Ralphie’s friends, a character named Schwartz (played by R.D. Robb), sticks his tongue to the school’s icy flagpole.

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(Warner Bros.)

Flick’s tongue doesn’t get unstuck until the fire and police departments intervene.

“Was it painful? No,” Scott Schwartz says, asking and answering the anticipated question unprompted.

The actor didn’t suffer because he, unlike Flick, had a prop department looking out for him.

“They made a piece of plastic that they slid over [the flagpole],” he says. “It had a little hole in it with a suction tube that went into the snow — you couldn’t see it, it was a little motor, like a small vacuum cleaner, [and] the hole-opening [in the plastic] was about the size of your pinky nail. So when you put your tongue there or finger or whatever, it just stuck.”

“I can make the sound effect,” Schwartz adds, “but you can’t write that.”

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(Warner Bros.)

Sometimes, Schwartz recounts, he tugged too hard and his tongue came right off. But, again, there was no pain. The weather conditions were another matter.

“The worst part about it was just the bitter, bitter cold that we had,” Schwartz says. “We were two days out there, and it was between 20 and 25 below zero with the wind chill.”

From those two days, Schwartz got his piece of movie immortality. His bronze likeness — in tongue-to-flagpole form — has stood in Hammond, Indiana, hometown of Christmas Story author and narrator Jean Shepherd, since 2013.

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Schwartz at the unveiling of his ‘Christmas Story’ statue (Courtesy of Sculpture Resource)

And he once watched basketball great Michael Jordan recreate the scene in the Chicago Bulls locker room.

“He was perfect. He was dead-on,” Schwartz says of Jordan. “I was just beyond elated. I was lit up like a Christmas tree inside.”

Sounds about right.