Chicago Tribune
By Lisa Black, Tribune reporter
December 21, 2010
At age 4, Phil Wenz was no bigger than an elf when he slipped on his dad's red flannel shirt and pajama pants and used safety pins to hold up a white kerchief beard. It was the beginning of what would become a full-time career as Santa Claus.
The payoff came this week when Wenz, 48, learned he has been selected as a charter member of the Santa Claus Hall of Fame (santaclaushall.com). His portrait, along with those of 13 other famous jolly old men, will be displayed in an exhibit at the Santa's Candy Castle tourist attraction in — you guessed it — Santa Claus, Ind. Of the inaugural group, Wenz is the only living member.
The downstate native has marched in parades, toured hospitals and held court for more than 20 years at Santa's Village in Dundee.
"I probably have had a couple million people crawl across me," said Wenz, of Crescent City, about 25 miles south of Kankakee.
With a daughter named Holly — she once joked that she could find him in any mall — Wenz takes this Santa stuff seriously. It takes two hours for him to make up his face and glue on a $1,500 beard and wig.
"To me, it's just normal," he said. "It's the only job I have ever had."
Asked what he would put on his holiday wish list, Wenz grew thoughtful.
He savors the history of St. Nicholas and Christmas past. Today he receives fewer "Dear Santa" letters and more electronic Tweets, which are difficult for his stubby fingers to master.
"There's too much commercialism," he said. "We need to slow down and look in our rearview mirror and see where we are going."
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