
It was the kind of Christmas television moment that simply doesn’t exist anymore. On a glittering December night in 1968, millions of American households gathered around their living room sets to watch The Dean Martin Christmas Show — unaware that they were about to witness one of the most heart-warming holiday performances of its era.

Dean Martin, effortlessly charming as always, stepped onto the festively decorated stage with the Golddiggers by his side, their sparkling gowns shimmering under the studio lights. What followed was a breathtaking medley that felt like a warm embrace: “Daddy,” “True Love,” and the jubilant “We Wish You the Merriest.”
From the very first notes, the atmosphere shifted. The audience fell silent, soaking in the soft, delicate harmonies that seemed to float like snowflakes through the room. Martin’s velvety voice blended beautifully with the Golddiggers’ light, crystalline tones, creating a sound that felt both intimate and grand — a perfect snapshot of Christmas magic in the golden age of television.

Viewers at home felt it too. Families huddled together on sofas; children sat cross-legged on the carpet; parents smiled as Dean crooned his way through melodies of love, nostalgia, and pure holiday joy. It was the kind of performance that made Christmas feel bigger, softer, kinder — the reason so many still revisit these clips today.
By the time the medley closed with the uplifting cheer of “We Wish You the Merriest,” the studio audience burst into applause, and the stage glowed with the unmistakable warmth of a classic Dean Martin Christmas moment. Decades later, that performance remains a treasured reminder of an era when holiday specials weren’t just background entertainment — they were an event, a celebration, a memory shared across generations.
A piece of Christmas television history… wrapped in velvet vocals and timeless charm.