The story of Cinderella
and its themes have appeared in literature and other forms of art. This
page provides a small discussion of some of the better known treatments
by authors and other artists.
Novels produced by romance
publishers are not listed on this page, but can be found on Romance
Novels: Fairy Tale Romances at Cinderella.
Over 100 Cinderella themed romance novels are on this list.
Here, too, is a link to Cinderella
Bibliography by Russell A. Peck, a site which contains an almost exhaustive
listing and discussion of Cinderella's appearance in various art forms.
Cassidy, Kay. The Cinderella Society. New York: EgmontUSA, 2010. Amazon.com:Buy the book in hardcover.
NOVEL: "Sixteen-year-old Jess Parker survives by staying invisible. After nine schools in ten years, she's come to terms with life as a perpetual new girl, neither popular nor outcast. At Mt. Sterling High, Jess gets the chance of a lifetime: an invitation to join The Cinderella Society, a secret club of the most popular girls in school, where makeovers are the first order of official business. But there's more to being a Cindy than just reinventing yourself from the outside, a concept lost on Jess as she dives tiara-first into creating a hot new look.
With a date with her popular crush and a chance to finally fit in, Jess's life seems to be a perfect fairy tale. That is until the Wickeds--led by Jess's archenemy--begin targeting innocent girls in their war against the Cindys, and Jess discovers her new sisterhood is about much more than who rules Mt. Sterling High School. It's a centuries-old battle of good vs. evil, and the Cindys need Jess on special assignment. But when the mission threatens to destroy her new dream life, Jess is forced to choose between this dream realized and honoring the Sisterhood. What's a girl to do when the glass slipper fits, but she doesn't want to wear it anymore?"
Charles, Veronika Martenova. It's Not about the Pumpkin! New York: Tundra Books, 2010. Amazon.com:Buy the book inebook or paperback.
NOVEL: Here are five first books for fledgling readers that offer the enjoyment of a good story along with the thrill of accomplishment that comes from independent reading. Written in short, easy phrases with carefully selected vocabulary and plentiful illustrations, each book helps youngsters achieve success as they have fun. The series follows three friends who love to share stories. In each book, one is reminded of a well-known story: Little Red Riding Hood in It's Not About the Hunter!, Beauty and the Beast in It's Not About the Rose!, Snow White in It's Not About the Apple!, Cinderella in It's Not About the Pumpkin!, and Hansel and Gretel in It's Not About the Crumbs! As one friend starts, the others are reminded of versions they know so each volume has three stories within one framework. The stories come from around the world, and Veronika Martenova Charles provides a note at the end of each book to describe the origins.
Cross, Sarah. Kill Me Softly. New York: EgmontUSA, 2012. Amazon.com:Buy the book inebook or hardcover.
NOVEL: Mirabelle's past is shrouded in secrecy, from her parents' tragic deaths to her guardians' half-truths about why she can't return to her birthplace, Beau Rivage. Desperate to see the town, Mira runs away a week before her sixteenth birthday—and discovers a world she never could have imagined.
In Beau Rivage, nothing is what it seems—the strangely pale girl with a morbid interest in apples, the obnoxious playboy who's a beast to everyone he meets, and the chivalrous guy who has a thing for damsels in distress. Here, fairy tales come to life, curses are awakened, and ancient stories are played out again and again.
But fairy tales aren't pretty things, and they don't always end in happily ever after. Mira has a role to play, a fairy tale destiny to embrace or resist. As she struggles to take control of her fate, Mira is drawn into the lives of two brothers with fairy tale curses of their own . . . brothers who share a dark secret. And she'll find that love, just like fairy tales, can have sharp edges and hidden thorns.
Dickerson, Melanie. The Captive Maiden. New York: Zondervan, 2013. Amazon.com:Buy the book inebook or paperback.
NOVEL: Happily Ever After ...Or Happily Nevermore? Gisela's childhood was filled with laughter and visits from nobles such as the duke and his young son. But since her father's death, each day has been filled with nothing but servitude to her stepmother. So when Gisela learns the duke's son, Valten---the boy she has daydreamed about for years---is throwing a ball in hopes of finding a wife, she vows to find a way to attend, even if it's only for a taste of a life she'll never have. To her surprise, she catches Valten's eye. Though he is rough around the edges, Gisela finds Valten has completely captured her heart. But other forces are bent on keeping the two from falling further in love, putting Gisela in more danger than she ever imagined.
Dokey, Cameron. Before Midnight. New York: Simon Pulse, 2007. Amazon.com: Buy the book in paperback.
NOVEL:
From publisher: "Etienne de Brabant is brokenhearted. His wife has died in childbirth, leaving him alone with an infant daughter he cannot bear to name. But before he abandons her for king and court, he brings a second child to be raised alongside her, a boy whose identity he does not reveal.
The girl, La Cendrillon, and the boy, Raoul, pass sixteen years in the servants' care until one day a very fine lady arrives with her two daughters. The lady has married La Cendrillon's father, and her arrival changes their lives.
When an invitation to a great ball reaches the family, La Cendrillon's new stepmother will make a decision with far-reaching effects. Her choice will lead La Cendrillon and Raoul toward their destiny -- a choice that will challenge their understanding of family, test their loyalty and courage, and, ultimately, teach them who they are."
Ensor, Barbara. Cinderella (As If
You Didn't Already Know the Story). New York: Schwartz & Wade, 2006. Amazon.com: Buy the book in hardcover.
NOVEL: From the publisher: "I know,
I know. You’ve heard the story a million times before. Mean stepmother.
Lots of sweeping. Fancy ball. You remember. Or do you? Did you remember
that Cinderella was such a nice girl—so smart and funny? You probably
would’ve liked her. Did you know that “Cinderella” was just a nickname?
And that her handsome prince loved Jell-o and was a wonderful dancer?
Readers will delight in following Cinderella through all the usual happenings,
presented in a most unusual way. And they’ll finally see what becomes
of her after she marries the prince. So maybe you should hear the story
one last time. Because it’s actually way different than you might have
thought. . . ."
NOVEL: A retelling of the classic tale
of Cinderella brings to vivid life the trials and tribulations of young
Ella, mistreated by her nasty stepmother and unattractive stepsisters,
who dreams of going to the Prince's ball.
George, Jessica Day. Princess of Glass. New York: Bloomsbury USA Children's Books, 2010. Amazon.com:Buy the book in hardcover.
NOVEL: "Hoping to escape the troubles in her kingdom, Princess Poppy reluctantly agrees to take part in a royal exchange program, whereby young princes and princesses travel to each other's countries in the name of better political alliances?and potential marriages. It's got the makings of a fairy tale?until a hapless servant named Eleanor is tricked by a vengeful fairy godmother into competing with Poppy for the eligible prince. Ballgowns, cinders, and enchanted glass slippers fly in this romantic and action-packed happily-ever-after quest from an author with a flair for embroidering tales in her own delightful way."
Haddix, Margaret Peterson. Just
Ella. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1999. Amazon.com:
Buy the book inhardcoverorpaperback. Amazon.co.uk: Buy
the book inhardcoverorpaperback. Amazon.ca: Buy the
book inhardcoverorpaperback.
NOVEL: From book cover: It's a familiar story: In spite
of the obstacles put in her way by her wicked stepmother, Ella goes to
the ball, sweeps Prince Charming off his feet, and is chosen to be his
bride. Now she's comfortably ensconced in the palace, awaiting marriage
to the man of her dreams. It's happily ever after time, right? Wrong!
Life for Ella has become an endless round of lessons and restrictions;
even worse, Prince Charming turns out to be more like Prince Boring. Why
can't she talk with him the way she can with Jed, her earnest young tutor?
Slowly, Ella comes to realize she doesn't want the life she fought so
hard to win. But breaking her engagement proves more difficult -- and
dangerous -- than escaping her stepmother's tyranny.
Hines, Jim C. The Stepsister Scheme. New York: DAW, 2009.
Amazon.com: Buy the book in paperback.
NOVEL: From the publisher: "What would happen if an author went back to the darker themes of the original fairy tales for his plots, and then crossed the Disney princesses with Charlie’s Angels? What’s delivered is The Stepsister Scheme—a whole new take on what happened to Cinderella and her prince after the wedding. And with Jim C. Hines penning the tale readers can bet it won't be 'and they lived happily ever after.' "
Kantor, Melissa. If I Have a Wicked Stepmother,
Where's My Prince?. New York: Hyperion, 2005. Amazon.com: Buy the book inhardcover.
NOVEL: From the publisher: "Mrs. McBloom, clean up
your room!"For nearly fifty years, that's been the refrain of janitors,
principals, and students who enter the chaos of Room Five. Now the beloved
Mrs. McBloom-who has taught nearly everyone in the town of Up Yonder,
even Principal Pumpernickel-is about to retire. Finally, she must clean
up her classroom.But where to begin? Years of science experiments have
left all kinds of critters hoppin' and cluckin' and flyin' around. Giant
sunflowers droop over desks; vines with fat green beans climb the walls;
and a full-grown apple tree grows smack-dab in the middle of the floor.
There are more books stacked in Room Five than in the Up Yonder Library.
And who knows what else lurks in the piles of papers or the lost-and-found
box?"
NOVEL: Elena Klovis was supposed to be her
kingdom's Cinderella -- until an accident of fate left her with a completely
inappropriate prince! Determined not to remain with her stepfamily, Elena
set out to get a new job -- and ended up becoming the Fairy Godmother
for the land. But "Breaking with Tradition" was no easy matter. True,
she didn't have to sleep in the chimney, but she had to deal with arrogant,
stuffed-shirt princes who kept trying to rise above their place in the
tale. In fact, one of them was so ornery that Elena could do nothing but
change him into a donkey. Still, her practical nature couldn't let him
roam the country, so she brought the donkey -- er, the prince! -- home
to her cottage to teach him some lessons. All the while keeping in mind
that breaking with tradition can land everyone into a kettle of fish --
sometimes literally!
Lackey, Mercedes. Phoenix and
Ashes. New York: DAW, 2004. Amazon.com: Buy the book in hardcover.
NOVEL: Phoenix and
Ashes is Lackey's fourth book in her Elemental Masters series (including The Fire Rose, Gates of Sleep, and Serpent's Shadow).
This novel is a retelling of the Cinderella story, set around Stratford,
England 1918ish.
Levine, Gail Carson. Cinderellis
and the Glass Hill. New York: Harpercollins, 2000. Amazon.com: Buy the book inhardcoverorpaperback. Amazon.co.uk: Buy
the book inhardcoverorpaperback. Amazon.ca: Buy the book inhardcoverorpaperback.
NOVEL: In this unusual spin on an old favorite,
Cinderlla is a boy! He's Cinderellis, and he has two unfriendly brothers
and no fairy godmother to help him out. Luckily, he does have magical
powders, and he intends to use them to win the hand of his Princess Charming--
that is, Marigold. The only problem is-- Marigold thinks Cinderellis is
a monster!
NOVEL: A light comedy which explains why Ella is forced
into strange behaviors. She does her best to rise above the curse of complete
obedience she labors beneath and ultimately wins her prince's heart with
her courage, not her beauty. This book is being adapted into a feature
film starring Anne Hathaway to be released in 2004.
Lo, Malinda. Ash. New York: Little, Brown Young Readers, 2009. Amazon.com:
Buy the book inhardcover.
NOVEL: From the publisher: "In the wake of her father's death, Ash is left at the mercy of her cruel stepmother. Consumed with grief, her only joy comes by the light of the dying hearth fire, rereading the fairy tales her mother once told her. In her dreams, someday the fairies will steal her away, as they are said to do. When she meets the dark and dangerous fairy Sidhean, she believes that her wish may be granted.
The day that Ash meets Kaisa, the King's Huntress, her heart begins to change. Instead of chasing fairies, Ash learns to hunt with Kaisa. Though their friendship is as delicate as a new bloom, it reawakens Ash's capacity for love-and her desire to live. But Sidhean has already claimed Ash for his own, and she must make a choice between fairy tale dreams and true love."
NOVEL: From book cover: We all have heard the story of
Cinderella, the beautiful child cast out to slave among the ashes.But
what of her stepsisters, the homely pair exiled into ignominy by the fame
of their lovely sibling? What fate befell those untouched by beauty .
. . and what curses accompanied Cinderella's exquisite looks? Set against
the rich backdrop of seventeenth-century Holland, Confessions of an Ugly
Stepsister tells the story of Iris, an unlikely heroine who finds herself
swept from the lowly streets of Haarlem to a strange world of wealth,
artifice, and ambition. Iris's path quickly becomes intertwined with that
of Clara, the mysterious and unnaturally beautiful girl destined to become
her sister.
McBain, Ed. Cinderella. New
York: Henry Holt, 1986. Amazon.com: Buy the book in hardcover or paperback.
NOVEL: Mystery: Part of McBain's Matthew Hope series.
Marriott, Zoe. Shadows on the Moon. New York: Candlewick, 2012. Amazon.com:Buy the book inebook or hardcover or paperback.
NOVEL: A powerful tale of magic, love, and revenge set in fairy-tale Japan. Trained in the magical art of shadow-weaving, sixteen-year-old Suzume is able to re-create herself in any form — a fabulous gift for a girl desperate to escape her past. But who is she really? Is she a girl of noble birth living under the tyranny of her mother’s new husband, Lord Terayama? Or a lowly drudge scraping a living in the ashes of Terayama’s kitchens? Or is she Yue, the most beautiful courtesan in the Moonlit Lands? Whatever her true identity, Suzume is destined to use her skills to steal the heart of a prince in a revenge plot to destroy Terayama. And nothing will stop her, not even the one true aspect of her life- her love for a fellow shadow-weaver.
Meyer, Marissa. Cinder. New York: Feiwel & Friends, 2012. Amazon.com:Buy the book inebook or hardcover or paperback.
NOVEL: Humans and androids crowd the raucous streets of New Beijing. A deadly plague ravages the population. From space, a ruthless lunar people watch, waiting to make their move. No one knows that Earth’s fate hinges on one girl. . . .
Cinder, a gifted mechanic, is a cyborg. She’s a second-class citizen with a mysterious past, reviled by her stepmother and blamed for her stepsister’s illness. But when her life becomes intertwined with the handsome Prince Kai’s, she suddenly finds herself at the center of an intergalactic struggle, and a forbidden attraction. Caught between duty and freedom, loyalty and betrayal, she must uncover secrets about her past in order to protect her world’s future.
Mizuno, Junko. Cinderalla. Viz Communications,
2002. Amazon.com: Buy the book in paperback.
GRAPHIC NOVEL: From book cover: This is the classic fairy
tale turned on its head. In Cinderalla, Dad and the stepsisters are zombies,
the family runs a yakitori restaurant, and the prince is so sick he’s
on a permanent IV support system. Junko Mizuno’s work possesses a postfeminist
consciousness, and the book’s psychedelic tone is enhanced by the artist’s
playful, “grotesque-cute” color illustrations.
Napoli, Donna Jo. Bound. New York: Atheneum,
2004. Amazon.com: Buy the book in hardcover.
NOVEL: A novel set in China and based on Cinderella.
From the publisher: Young Xing Xing is bound. Bound to
her father's second wife and daughter after Xing Xing's father has passed
away. Bound to a life of servitude as a young girl in ancient China, where
the life of a woman is valued less than that of livestock. Bound to be
alone and unmarried, with no parents to arrange for a suitable husband.
Dubbed "Lazy One" by her stepmother, Xing Xing spends her days taking
care of her half sister, Wei Ping, who cannot walk because of her foot
bindings, the painful but compulsory tradition for girls who are fit to
be married. Even so, Xing Xing is content, for now, to practice her gift
for poetry and calligraphy, to tend to the mysterious but beautiful carp
in her garden, and to dream of a life unbound by the laws of family and
society.
But all of this is about to change as the time for the
village's annual festival draws near, and Stepmother, who has spent nearly
all of the family's money, grows desperate to find a husband for Wei Ping.
Xing Xing soon realizes that this greed and desperation may threaten not
only her memories of the past, but also her dreams for the future.
Palmer, Robin. Cindy Ella. New York: Puffin, 2008.
Amazon.com: Buy the book in paperback.
NOVEL: From the publisher: "Prom fever has infected LA—especially Cindy’s two annoying stepsisters, and her overly Botoxed stepmother. Cindy seems to be the only one immune to it all. But her anti-prom letter in the school newspaper does more to turn Cindy into Queen of the Freaks than close the gap between the popular kids and the rest of the students. Everyone thinks she’s committed social suicide, except for her two best friends, the yoga goddess India and John Hughes–worshipping Malcolm, and shockingly, the most popular senior at Castle Heights High and Cindy’s crush, Adam Silver. Suddenly Cindy starts to think that maybe her social life could have a happily ever after. But there’s still the rest of the school to deal with. With a little bit of help from an unexpected source and a fabulous pair of heels, Cindy realizes that she still has a chance at a happily ever after."
Parkinson, Siobhan. Sisters...No Way!. O'Brien Press, 1996. Amazon.com: Buy the book in paperback.
NOVEL: From book cover: "Cindy, a savvy yet cynical
teenager, still traumatized by her mother's recent death, is appalled
when her father falls in love with one of her teachers, a woman with two
teenage daughters of her own. She cannot imagine a worse fate than having
her teacher as her stepmother, and as for the two prissy girls, she is
never going to call them sisters . . . no way! But if Cindy dislikes her
prospective sisters, Ashling and Orla think she is an absolute horror-spoiled,
arrogant, and atrociously rude to them and their mother when they visit
her house. Will the girls ever get along and learn to be a family? Featuring
the girls' stories in two unique, back-to-back diaries, one for Cindy
and the other for Ashling and Orla, readers can choose which story to
begin with and will enjoy the varying viewpoints recording the same events."
Pullman, Philip. I Was a Rat!. New York:
Knopf, 2000. Amazon.com: Buy the book in hardcover or paperback.
NOVEL: From book cover: “I Was a Rat!” So insists a scruffy
boy named Roger. Maybe it’s true. But what is he now? A terrifying monster
running wild in the sewers? The Daily Scourge is sure of it. A victim
of “Rodent Delusion”? The hospital nurse says yes. A lucrative fairground
freak? He is to Mr. Tapscrew. A champion wriggler and a budding thief?
That’s what Billy thinks. Or just an ordinary small boy, though a little
ratty in his habits? Only three people believe this version of the story.
And it may take a royal intervention—and a bit of magic—to convince the
rest of the world. Set against the backdrop of a Royal Wedding—and a playful
parody of the press, I Was a Rat! is a magical weaving of humor, fairy
tale, and adventure.
Rallison, Janette. My Fair Godmother. New York: Walker Books, 2009.
Amazon.com: Buy the book in paperback.
NOVEL: From the publisher: "After her boyfriend dumps her for her older sister, sophomore Savannah Delano wishes she could find a true prince to take her to the prom. Enter Chrissy (Chrysanthemum) Everstar: Savannah’s gum-chewing, cell phone–carrying, high heel-wearing Fair Godmother. Showing why she’s only Fair—because she’s not a very good fairy student—Chrissy mistakenly sends Savannah back in time to the Middle Ages, first as Cinderella, then as Snow White. Finally she sends Tristan, a boy in Savannah’s class, back instead to turn him into her prom-worthy prince. When Savannah returns to the Middle Ages to save Tristan, they must team up to defeat a troll, a dragon, and the mysterious and undeniably sexy Black Knight. Laughs abound in this clever fairy tale twist from a master of romantic comedy."
St. Crow, Lili. Wayfarer: A Tale of Beauty and Madness. New York: Razorbill, 2014. Amazon.com:Buy the book inebook or hardcover or paperback.
NOVEL: The Charmer's Ball. Midnight. And one glass slipper...
Newly orphaned, increasingly isolated from her friends, and terrified of her violent stepmother, Ellen Sinder still believes she’ll be okay. She has a plan for surviving and getting through high school, which includes keeping her head down and saving any credits she can earn or steal. But when a train arrives from over the Waste beyond New Haven, carrying a golden boy and a new stepsister, all of Ellie’s plans begin to unravel, one by one.
Just when all hope is lost, Ellie meets an odd old woman with a warm hearth and a heavenly garden. Auntie’s kindness is intoxicating, and Ellie finally has a home again. Yet when the clock strikes twelve on the night of the annual Charmer’s Ball, Ellie realizes that no charm is strong enough to make her past disappear...
In a city where Twisted minotaurs and shifty fey live alongside diplomats and charmers, a teenage girl can disappear through the cracks into safety--or into something much more dangerous. So what happens when the only safety you can find wants to consume you as well?
Lili St. Crow is the author of the Strange Angels series for young adults and the Dante Valentine series, among others, for adults. She is also the author of Nameless, a companion book to Wayfarer. She lives in Vancouver, Washington with her family. Visit lilistcrow.com to find out more.
Stanley, Diane. Bella at Midnight. New York: HarperCollins, 2006. Amazon.com: Buy the book inhardcover.
NOVEL: From the publisher: "In the little village
of Castle Down, in a kingdom plagued by war, lives a peasant girl called
Bella. Blessed with a kind family and a loving friend, she manages to
create her own small patch of sunlight in a dark and dangerous world.
Bella is a blacksmith's daughter; her friend Julian is a prince -- yet
neither seems to notice the great gulf that divides his world from hers.
Suddenly Bella's world collapses. First Julian betrays her. Then it is
revealed that she is not the peasant she believed herself to be: She is
Isabel, the daughter of a knight who abandoned her in infancy. Now he
wants her back, so Bella is torn from her beloved foster family and sent
to live with her deranged father and his resentful new wife. Soon Bella
is caught up in a terrible plot that will change her life -- and the kingdom
-- forever. With the help of her godmother and three enchanted gifts,
she sets out on a journey in disguise that will lead her to a destiny
far greater than any she could have imagined."
Stephens, Sarah Hines and Jane Mason. Princess
School: If the Shoe Fits. New York: Scholastic, 2004. Amazon.com: Buy the book inpaperback. Amazon.co.uk: Buy
the book in paperback.
NOVEL: From the publisher: With her feet bare (those glass
slippers don't fit) and her second-hand gown splattered with mud (thanks,
evil stepsisters), Ella's first day of Princess School is off to a lousy
start. If she can only find her fairy godmother before the first class
begins, Ella is sure she'll put things right. But her FG is off at a convention
and Ella is on her own--she'll have to get through the first weeks of
Princess School without any bibbity-bobbity-boo. Ella is terrified--until
she meets silly Snow, spunky Rapunzel, and beautiful, sheltered Rose.
Turgeon, Carolyn. Godmother: The Secret Cinderella Story. New York: Three Rivers Press, 2009.
Amazon.com: Buy the book in paperback or for your Kindle.
NOVEL: From the publisher: "Lil is an old woman who spends her days shelving rare books in a tiny Manhattan bookstore and lonely nights at home in her apartment. But Lil has an intriguing secret. Tucked and bound behind her back are white feathery wings–the only key to who she once was: the fairy godmother responsible for getting Cinderella to the ball to unite with her Prince Charming.
"But on that fateful night, something went terribly and beautifully wrong. Lil allowed herself the unthinkable: to feel the emotions of human beings and fall in love with the prince herself, going to the ball in place of Cinderella in her exquisitely gorgeous human guise. For her unforgivable mistake, she was banished to live among humans, far from her fairy sisters and their magical underwater world. But then one day she meets Veronica–a young, fair-skinned, flame-haired East Village beauty with a love of all things vintage and a penchant for falling in love with the wrong men–and suddenly it becomes clear to Lil that she’s been given a chance at redemption. If she can find a soul mate for Veronica, she may right her wrong and return to the fairy world she so deeply longs for. . . ."
Wilson, David Henry. The Coachman Rat. Ashmadi, New York: Baen, 1990.
NOVEL: A dark fantastical version of Cinderella presented
through the coachman's point of view.
Literature:
Short Stories
Belford, Jacey. "Baron Boscov's Bastard." Twice Upon A Time. Denise Little, ed. New York: DAW Books, 1999. Amazon.com: Buy the book in paperback.
SHORT STORY
Block, Francesca Lia. "Glass." The Rose and the Beast. New York: Harper Collins, 2000.
Amazon.com: Buy the book in hardbackor paperback.
SHORT STORY
Brooke, William. "The Fitting of the Slipper." A Telling of the Tales. New York: Harper Collins, 1990. Amazon.com:Buy the book in hardcover or paperback.
SHORT STORY
Carter, Angela. "Ashputtle." The Year's
Best Fantasy and Horror, Volume 4 . Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling,
eds. New York, St. Martin's Press, 1991.
SHORT STORY
Donoghue, Emma. "The Tale of the Shoe." Kissing
the Witch: Old Tales in New Skins. New York: Harper Collins, 1997.
Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
SHORT STORY
Duffy,Carol
Ann.
"Ashputtel." Rumpelstiltskin
and Other Grimm Tales. London: Faber and Faber, 1999. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback. Amazon.co.uk:Buy the book in paperback.
Also available
in:
Duffy,Carol
Ann.
"Ashputtel." Collected Grimm Tales. Dramatization by Tim Supple.
London: Faber and Faber, 2003. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback. Amazon.co.uk:Buy the book in paperback.
Duffy,Carol
Ann.
"Ashputtel." Grimm Tales. Dramatization by Tim Supple. London:
Faber and Faber, 1996. Amazon.com:Buy the book in paperback. Amazon.co.uk:Buy the book inpaperback.
SHORT STORY
Fisher, David. "Kingdom v. Prince
Charming." Legally Correct Fairy Tales. New York: Warner,
1996. Amazon.com:Buy the
book inhardcover.
SHORT STORY
Fowler, Karen Joy. "Recalling Cinderella." L. Ron Hubbard Presents The Best of Writers of the Future. Algis
Budrys, editor. Los Angeles: Bridge, 2000. Amazon.com:Buy
the book in paperback.
SHORT STORY
Galloway, Priscilla. "The Prince."Truly
Grim Tales. New York: Delacorte, 1995. Amazon.com:Buy
the book in paperback.
SHORT STORY
Garner, James Finn. "Cinderella." Politically Correct Bedtime Stories: Modern Tales for Our Life and
Times. New York: Hungry Minds Inc, 1994. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcover.
SHORT STORY
Hardesty, Emma. "Rosie's
Dance ." Black
Heart, Ivory Bones. Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling, eds. New York:
Avon, 2000. Amazon.com:Buy the book in paperback.
SHORT STORY
Harkrader, Lisa. "Rudy and the Prince." Newfangled Fairy Tales: Book #1. Bruce Lansky,
ed. New York: Meadowbrook Press, 1997. Amazon.com:Buy the book in paperback.
SHORT STORY
Harlan, Annita. "Princess in Puce."The
Armless Maiden. Terri Windling, ed. New York: Tor Books, 1995.
Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcover or paperback.
SHORT STORY
Harris, Joanne. "The Ugly Sister."Jigs
and Reels. New York: William Morrow, 2004.
Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcover.
SHORT STORY
Hawes, Louise. "Ashes." Black Pearls: A Faerie Strand. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2008. Amazon.com: Buy the book in hardcover.
SHORT STORY: "Ashes" is the prince's, not Cinderella's, view of "happily ever after."
Hoffman, Nina Kiriki. "Switched." Rotten Relations. Denise Little, editor. New York:
DAW, 2004. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
SHORT STORY
Kushner, Ellen. "Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep." The Armless Maiden. Terri Windling, ed. New York: Tor Books,
1995. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcover or paperback.
SHORT STORY
Lee, Tanith. "The Reason for Not Going to the
Ball (A Letter to Cinderella from Her Stepmother)." The Year's
Best Fantasy and Horror, Volume 10 . Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling,
eds. New York, St. Martin's Press, 1997.
SHORT STORY
Lee, Tanith. "When the Clock Strikes." Red as Blood: Or Tales from the Sisters Grimmer. New York: DAW
Books, 1983.
Amazon.com:Buy the book in paperback.
SHORT STORY
Luzier, Pamela. "After the Ball." Rotten Relations. Denise Little, editor. New York:
DAW, 2004. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
SHORT STORY
Maguire, Gregory. "Cinderelephant." Leaping Beauty: And Other Animal Fairy Tales. New York: HarperCollins,
2004. Amazon.com:Buy the book
inhardcover.
SHORT STORY
Mayer, Gloria Gilbert and Thomas Mayer.
"Cinderella." Goldilocks on Management: 27 Revisionist Fairy
Tales for Serious Managers. New York: American Management Association,
1999. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcover.
SHORT STORY
Oertel, Liya Lev. "The Fairy Godfather." Newfangled Fairy Tales: Book #2. Bruce
Lansky, ed. New York: Meadowbrook Press, 1998. Amazon.com:Buy the book in paperback.
SHORT STORY
Palwick, Susan. "Ever After." The Year's
Best Fantasy and Horror, Volume 1. Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling,
eds. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1988.
SHORT STORY
Peterson, Audrey. "Anniversary Ball." Once
Upon A Crime. Ed Gorman and Martin H. Greenberg, eds. New York: Berkeley
Prime Crime, 1998. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
SHORT STORY
Roberts, Gillian. "After Happily Ever." Once Upon A Crime. Ed Gorman and Martin H. Greenberg, eds. New York:
Berkeley Prime Crime, 1998. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
SHORT STORY
Rusch, Kristine Kathryn. "Love and Justice." Once Upon A Crime. Ed Gorman and Martin H. Greenberg, eds. New
York: Berkeley Prime Crime, 1998. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
SHORT STORY
Schlachter, Rita. "The Gold Ring." Newfangled Fairy Tales: Book #2. Bruce
Lansky, ed. New York: Meadowbrook Press, 1998. Amazon.com:Buy the book in paperback.
SHORT STORY
Sinor, Susan P. & Bradley H. "Serpent's
Tooth." Rotten Relations. Denise Little,
editor. New York: DAW, 2004. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
SHORT STORY
Smith, Mary Carter. "Cindy Ellie." Best-Loved
Stories Told at the National Storytelling Festival. Jonesborough,
TN: National Storytelling Press, 1991. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
SHORT STORY: Set in inner-city Baltimore.
Snyder, Midori. "Tattercoats." Black Thorn, White Rose. Ellen Datlow and Terri
Windling, eds. New York: Avon, 1995. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardback or paperback.
SHORT STORY: Tattercoats is part of the Cinderella
and Dearskin tales.
Straub, Peter. "Ashputtle." Black Thorn,
White Rose. Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling, eds. New York: Avon,
1995. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardback or paperback.
SHORT STORY
Walker, Barbara. "Cinder-Helle." Feminist
Fairy Tales. San Francisco: Harper, 1996. Amazon.com: Buy the book in hardcoveror paperback.
SHORT STORY
Yolen, Jane. "Cinder Elephant." A Wolf at the Door. Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling, eds. New
York: Simon & Schuster, 2000. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Ahmed-ud-din, Feroz. "Cinderella." Disenchantments: An Anthology of Modern Fairy Tale Poetry. Wolfgang Mieder, ed. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1985. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Alvarez, Julia. "Against Cinderella."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 172. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Barresi, Dorothy. "Cinderella and Lazarus, Part II." The
Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy Tales. Jeanne Marie
Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland, OR: Story Line Press,
2003. p. 212. Amazon.com:Buy
the book inpaperback.
Broumas, Olga. "Cinderella." Beginning with O. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1977. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Also
available in: Broumas, Olga. "Cinderella."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 155. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Bull, Emma. "The Stepsister's Story." The Armless Maiden. Terri Windling, ed. New York: Tor Books,
1995. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcover or paperback.
Also available at: "The
Stepsister's Story." Endicott Studio Website.http://www.endicott-studio.com/cofstep.html.
Also
available in:
Bull, Emma. "The Stepsister's Story."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 160. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Carryl, Guy Wetmore. "How Fair Cinderella Disposed of Her Shoe." Grimm Tales Made Gay. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1902.
Crooker, Barbara.
"Masquerade."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 116. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Dahl, Roald. "Cinderella." Revolting Rhymes. New York: Puffin Books, 1982. Amazon.com:Buy the book in hardcover or paperback.
Dame, Enid.
"Cinderella."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy Tales. Jeanne
Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland, OR: Story Line Press,
2003. p. 149. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Duhamel, Denise. "The Ugly Stepsister."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 189. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Edson, Russell.
"Cinderella's Life at the Castle."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 117. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Farjeon, Eleanor. "Coach." Disenchantments: An Anthology of Modern Fairy Tale Poetry. Wolfgang Mieder, ed. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1985. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Fisher, Aileen. "Cinderella Grass."Disenchantments:
An Anthology of Modern Fairy Tale Poetry. Wolfgang Mieder,
ed. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1985. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
French, Mary Blake. "Ella Of The
Cinders." Disenchantments: An Anthology of Modern Fairy Tale
Poetry. Wolfgang Mieder, ed. Hanover, NH: University Press
of New England, 1985. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Gerstler, Amy. "Scorched Cinderella."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 194. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Also available in: Gerstler, Amy. "Scorched Cinderella."Medicine. New York: Penguin, 2003. p. 17. Amazon.com:Buy the book in paperback.
Hadas, Pamela
White. "Queen Charming Writes Again."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 223. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Hambly, Barbara. "Achtung, My Princess, Goodnight."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 204. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Hay, Sara Henderson. "Interview." Story Hour. Fayetteville, AS: University of Arkansas Press, 1998. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Hazard, Caroline. "Cinderella." Narragansett Ballads with Songs and Lyrics. New York: Houghton
Mifflin & Company, 1894.
Herd, Tracey. "After the Impossible
Dream." New Women Poets. Carol Rumens, ed.
Highgreen Tarset Northumberland: Bloodaxe Books, 1990. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Holub, Miroslav. "Cinderella." Another Republic: 17 European and South American Writers. Charles Simic and Mark Strand, eds. New
York: The Ecco Press, 1976. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Hussey, Anne. "Cinderella Liberated."Disenchantments:
An Anthology of Modern Fairy Tale Poetry. Wolfgang Mieder,
ed. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1985. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Jarrell, Randall. "Cinderella." Disenchantments: An Anthology of Modern Fairy Tale Poetry. Wolfgang Mieder, ed. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1985. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Also
available in:
Jarrell, Randall. "Cinderella."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 210. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Joseph, M. K. "Cinderella." New Zealand Love Poems. Lauris Edmond, ed. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2000. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcover.
Kemp, Jan. "Cinderella." An Anthology of Twentieth Century New Zealand Poetry. Vincent O'Sullivan, ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1970. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Komunyakaa, Yusef. "Cinderella at
Big Sur." Pleasure Dome: New and Collected Poems. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2001. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Lochhead, Liz. "Beauty & The." Dreaming Frankenstein and Collected Poems. London: Polygon Books,
1984. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
This poem originally appeared in:
Lochhead, Liz. The
Grimm Sisters. London: Next Editions (In Association with Faber
& Faber), 1981.
Lochhead, Liz. "The Grim Sisters." Dreaming Frankenstein and Collected Poems. London: Polygon Books,
1984. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
This poem originally appeared in:
Lochhead, Liz. The
Grimm Sisters. London: Next Editions (In Association with Faber
& Faber), 1981.
Mitchell, Roger. "Cinderella." Disenchantments: An Anthology of Modern Fairy Tale Poetry. Wolfgang Mieder, ed. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1985. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Mitchell, Stephen. "Cinderella." Parables and Portraits. New York: Harper Perennial,
1990. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Pearson, Marlene
Joyce. "Twenty Years After."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 213. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Piatt, Sarah Morgan Bryan. "Questions
of the Hour." A Woman's Poems. New York: James R. Osgood and
Company, 1878.
Pickard, Cynthia. "Cinderella." Disenchantments: An Anthology of Modern Fairy Tale Poetry. Wolfgang Mieder, ed. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1985. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Plath, Sylvia. "Cinderella."Disenchantments:
An Anthology of Modern Fairy Tale Poetry. Wolfgang Mieder,
ed. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1985. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Reed, Tennessee. "Disney's
Cinderella." From Totems to Hip-Hop. Ishmael Reed, editor.
New York: Thunder's Mouth Press, 2003. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Reid, Dorothy E. "Coach Into Pumpkin."Disenchantments:
An Anthology of Modern Fairy Tale Poetry. Wolfgang Mieder,
ed. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1985. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Roberts, Elizabeth Madox. "Cinderella's
Song." Disenchantments: An Anthology of Modern Fairy Tale
Poetry. Wolfgang Mieder, ed. Hanover, NH: University Press
of New England, 1985. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Sansom, Clive. "Fairy
Godmother." Return to Magic. London: Leslie Frewin, 1969. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcover.
Sansom, Clive. "A True Princess." Return to Magic. London: Leslie Frewin, 1969. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcover.
Saunders, Ruby C. "Cinderella." Black Sister: Poetry by Black American Women, 1746–1980. Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1981. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Sexton, Anne. "Cinderella."Transformations. Houghton Mifflin Co., 1979. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
"Cinderella and the prince
lived, they say, happily ever after,
like two dolls in a museum case
never bothered by diapers or dust,
never arguing over the timing of an egg,
never telling the same story twice...."
Shcherbina, Tatiana. "The
Stepmother." In the Grip of Strange Thoughts: Russian Poetry in
a New Era. J. Kates, translator. Chicago: Zephyr Press, 1999. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcover or paperback.
Shore,
Jane. "The Glass Slipper."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 113. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Shuttle,
Penelope. "Ashputtel."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 77. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Silverstein, Shel. "In Search
of Cinderella." A Light in the Attic. New York: HarperCollins,
1981. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcover.
Strauss, Gwen. "Cinderella." Trail of
Stones. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1990. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Also available
in:
Strauss, Gwen. "Cinderella."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 131. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Van
Duyn, Mona.
"Cinderella's Story."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 42. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Vande Velde, Vivian. "Evidence."Tales From the Brothers Grimm and the Sisters Weird. San Diego,
CA: Harcourt Brace, 1995. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Viorst, Judith. "...And Then the Prince Knelt
Down and Tried to Put the Glass Slipper on Cinderella's Foot." If
I Were in Charge of the World and Other Worries: Poems for Children and
their Parents. New York: Atheneum, 1981. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcover or paperback.
Also available in:
Don't Bet on the Prince: Contemporary Feminist Fairy Tales in North America
and England. Jack Zipes, ed. New York: Viking, 1973. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Weaver, Edith. "Lost Cinderella."Disenchantments:
An Anthology of Modern Fairy Tale Poetry. Wolfgang Mieder,
ed. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1985. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcoveror paperback.
Weiner, Estha. "Transfiguration Begins at Home."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 250. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Wendt, Ingrid.
"Cinderella Dream at Ten."The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy
Tales. Jeanne Marie Beaumont and Claudia Carlson, editors. Ashland,
OR: Story Line Press, 2003. p. 147. Amazon.com:Buy the book inpaperback.
Whitman, Sarah Helen. "Cinderella." Poems by Sarah Helen Whitman. New York: Hougton,
Osgood and Company, 1879.
Yolen, Jane. "Knives." Snow
White, Blood Red. Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling, eds. New York:
Avon, 1995. Amazon.com:Buy the book inhardcover orpaperback.
BALLET: Although I have seen the ballet of
Cinderella performed twice, the music still surprises me every time I
hear it in performance. I have provided links to some of the more popular
recordings of the work below. I do not presume to endorse a particular
recording since I am not a music scholar.
Rossini, Giacchino Antonio. La Cenerentola. 1817.
OPERA: Italian Rossini (1792-1868) composed this extremely
modified version of Cinderella as an opera. Rossini is also famous for The Barber of Seville and William Tell.
Stephen Sondheim. Into The
Woods.
In 1986, Into the Woods hit Broadway and
enjoyed great success. The musical incorporates many fairy tale characters
and plots including Sleeping Beauty. I have included the Broadway and
London casts' recordings below. An excellent site about this musical
is at Into
the Woods.
Title: Into
the Woods--Original Cast Recording Performers: Bernadette Peters, Robert Westenberg, Joanna Gleason,
Chip Zien, Tom Aldredge.
Amazon.com: Buy the CD.
Download the CD.
Title: Into the Woods--London Cast
Recording Performers: Imelda Staunton, Julia McKenzie, Nicolas Parsons,
Jacqueline Dankworth, Clive Carter.
Amazon.com: Buy the CD.
Song Title: Hey Cinderella Artist: Suzy Bogguss Genre: Country Label: Capitol Original Release Date: 1993 on Something
Up My Sleeve
Amazon.com: Buy the CD.
Download the song or the CD.
Song Title: Cinderella Artist: The Push Stars Genre: Rock Label: Capitol Original Release Date: 1999 on After the Party
Amazon.com: Buy the CD.
Download the song or the CD.
MacGregor, Helen, and Stephen Chadwick.Roald Dahl's Cinderella. Vladimir Tarnopolski, composer. New York: A & C Black Publishers Ltd, 2008. Amazon.com: Buy the complete performance pack.
MUSICAL: Based on the "Revolting Rhyme" by Roald Dahl.
There are hundreds
of films with Cinderella themes in them. The earliest dates back to 1898.
I have not listed all of them here, but have limited the list to many
of the best known or important ones. I recommend visiting Internet
Movie Database to learn more about Cinderella films.
Cinderella (1898). George
Albert Smith, director. UK. Also known as Cinderella and the Fairy
Godmother.
George Albert Smith was one of the earliest
pioneers of film, often compared with Georges Méliès. He, too, found inspiration
in the Cinderella story and brought it to early film.
Cendrillon (1899). Georges
Méliès, director. France. Also known as Cinderella.
Georges Méliès was one of the earliest pioneers
of film. He found inspiration in the Cinderella story and brought it to
early film. "Melies was also the first to use techniques such as
the fade-in, the fade-out, and the dissolve to create the first real narrative
films"(IMDB.com).
Méliès would later film another version of Cinderella, Cendrillon ou
La pantoufle mystérieuse in 1912.
Cinderella (1914). James Kirkwood, director.
Cast:
Mary Pickford .... Cinderella
Owen Moore .... Prince Charming
Isabel Vernon .... Stepmother
Georgia Wilson .... Stepsister
Lucille Carney .... Stepsister
Mary Pickford stars in this early silent film version
of the tale.
Aschenputtel (1922). Lotte
Reiniger, director. Germany. Also known as Cinderella.
SILHOUETTE ANIMATION SHORT: Reiniger produced
another short of Cinderella in 1961 in the UK. Lotte Reiniger is
historically important as an early animator, specializing in shadow puppet
animation, also known as silhouette animation. She was arguably the best
talent in this particular craft. She started in silent films while living
in Germany and continued producing shorts for over 40 years, primarily
in the UK. For more information, read this article by William Moritz published
by Animation World Magazine: http://www.awn.com/mag/issue1.3/articles/moritz1.3.html
Cinderella (1922). Walt Disney,
director.
ANIMATED SHORT: An early Disney interpretation
of the tale in black and white.
Poor Cinderella (1934). Dave
Fleischer, director. Amazon.com: Buy it onVHS.
ANIMATED SHORT: A Betty Boop interpretation
of Cinderella. The only Betty Boop cartoon ever filmed in color.
First Love (1939). Henry Koster, director. Amazon.com: Buy it onVHS.
Cast:
Deanna Durbin .... Connie Harding
Robert Stack .... Ted Drake
Eugene Pallette .... James F. Clinton
Helen Parrish .... Barbara Clinton
"In this reworking of Cinderella, orphaned Connie
Harding is sent to live with her rich aunt and uncle after graduating
from boarding school. She's hardly received with open arms, especially
by her snobby cousin Barbara. When the entire family is invited to a major
social ball, Barbara sees to it that Connie is forced to stay home. With
the aid of her uncle, who acts as her fairy godfather, Connie makes it
to the ball and meets her Prince Charming in Ted Drake, her cousin's boyfriend"
(IMDB.com).
La Cenerentola (1948). Fernando Cerchio,
director. Italy. Also known as Cinderella. Amazon.com: Buy it onVHS.
Cast:
Gino Del Signore .... Don Ramiro, Prince of Salerno
Afro Poli .... Dandini, the Prince's valet
Enrico Formichi .... Alidoro, Magician, Philosopher and Court Counselor
Vito De Taranto .... Don Magnifico, Baron of Montefiascone, stepfather
of Cenerentola
Lori Landi .... Cenerentola
"When Alidoro, the Magician, discovers (through his
'hidden secrets' book) the location of the destined bride of the Prince,
Don Ramiro, he sends this information in a message to the palace by carrier
pigeon - with a recommendation that the Prince change places with his
valet, Dandini. Following this advice, the Prince meets Cenerentola -
and there is an instant attraction between them. Later, Alidoro magically
creates beautiful clothes and jewels for Cenerentola, and takes her to
the Prince's palace. Dandini (still pretending to be the prince) becomes
enamored of her, but Cenerentola rejects his advances, saying that she
loves his 'valet'. Overhearing this, the delighted Ramiro asks her to
marry him, but Cenerentola says that he must first seek her out, and gives
him a bracelet - telling him to look for the companion bracelet on her
right arm. The Prince and Dandini resume their true identities, and the
Prince sets out on his quest - little realising that Alidoro is, once
again, 'pulling the strings'." (IMDB.com)
Cinderella (1950). Wilfred Jackson, director.
Walt Disney Productions.
Amazon.com: Buy the movie on DVD or VHS.
Disney's adaptation of the beloved fairy tale became a
classic in its own right, thanks to some memorable tunes (including "A
Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes," "Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo,"
and the title song) and some endearingly cute comic relief. We all know
the story--the wicked stepmother and stepsisters simply won't have it,
this uppity Cinderella thinking she's going to a ball designed to find
the handsome prince an appropriate sweetheart, but perseverance, animal
buddies, and a well-timed entrance by a fairy godmother make sure things
turn out all right. There are a few striking sequences of pure animation--for
example, Cinderella is reflected in bubbles drifting through the air--and
the design is rich and evocative throughout. It's a simple story padded
here agreeably with comic business, particularly Cinderella's rodent pals
(dressed up conspicuously like the dwarf sidekicks of another famous Disney
heroine) and their misadventures with a wretched cat named Lucifer.
Aschenputtel (1955). Fritz
Genschow, director. West Germany. Also known as Cinderella.
Cast:
Änne Bruck .... Stepmother
Fritz Genschow .... Father
Rüdiger Lichti .... Prince
Rita-Maria Nowotny .... Cinderella
Renée Stobrawa .... Fairy Godmother
MUSICAL
The Glass Slipper (1955). Charles Walters,
director. Amazon.com: Buy it onVHS.
Cast:
Leslie Caron .... Ella
Michael Wilding .... Prince Charles
Another musical version of the story starring Leslie Caron.
Caron, best known for her dancing, gives an agreeable performance of Cinderella
in this version of the tale. Not a favorite when it has so much competition,
but it isn't the worst version of the tale to be put on film either.
"In a small pleasant European village, there is one
unhappy person: Ella. She is despised by everyone, and mistreated by her
step-mother and step-sisters. Out feeling miserable one day, Ella meets
a handsome young man, who falls for her. He is really Prince Charles,
the son of the Duke, but he tells her he is the son of the cook, and invites
her to a great ball at the Duke's castle. A strange woman who lives in
the mountains by herself befriends Ella, and dresses her up so she can
attend the ball. She goes, and is a great success, but must run out at
midnight. In her haste, she drops a single glass slipper. The Prince uses
the slipper to find her" (IMDB.com).
Cinderella (1957). Ralph
Nelson, director.
Cast:
Julie Andrews .... Cinderella
Howard Lindsay .... King
Dorothy Stickney .... The Queen
Ilka Chase .... The Stepmother
A made-for-TV musical version of the story with the music
by Rodgers and Hammerstein. This first version in 1957 stars Julie Andrews.
The second version stars Lesley Ann Warren. A later version made in 1997
stars Brandy and Whitney Houston.
Fractured Fairy Tales: Cinderella (1959-60) (TV). In Rocky and Bullwinkle. Jay Ward Productions. Amazon.com: Buy it onDVD.
ANIMATED SHORT: The Fractured Fairy Tales
segment became a popular part of the first season of the Rocky and Bullwinkle
Show (known under various names through the years) that premiered in the
fall of 1959. They have remained in syndication ever since. Cinderella originally aired in Episode 15 of Season 1.
Cinderfella (1960). Frank Tashlin, director. Amazon.com: Buy it onVHS.
Cast:
Jerry Lewis .... Cinderfella
Ed Wynn .... Fairy Godfather
Judith Anderson .... Wicked Stepmother
A farcical version of the tale starring Jerry Lewis as
an innocous but lovable buffoon guided by his fairy godfather. Silly and
typical Lewis, but it still fits this category!
Cinderella (1963). Lotte Reiniger,
director. UK.
SILHOUETTE ANIMATION SHORT: Not to be confused
with Reiniger's earlier production of Aschenputtel in 1919. This
production was an Interlude for Theatrical Performance. Lotte Reiniger
is historically important as an early animator, specializing in shadow
puppet animation, also known as silhouette animation. She was arguably
the best talent in this particular craft. She started in silent films
while living in Germany and continued producing shorts for over 40 years,
primarily in the UK. For more information, read this article by William
Moritz published by Animation World Magazine: http://www.awn.com/mag/issue1.3/articles/moritz1.3.html
Cinderella (1964). Charles S. Dubin,
director. Amazon.com: Buy it onDVD or VHS.
Cast:
Lesley Ann Warren .... Cinderella
Stuart Damon .... Prince
Ginger Rogers .... Queen
Walter Pidgeon .... King
Celeste Holm .... Fairy Godmother
Jo Van Fleet .... Stepmother
A made-for-TV musical version of the story with the music
by Rodgers and Hammerstein. The first version in 1957 stars Julie Andrews.
This second version stars Lesley Ann Warren. A later version made in 1997
stars Brandy and Whitney Houston.
Hey Cinderella (1969). Jim Henson, director.
Cinderella gets an early Muppet interpretation.
Three Nuts for Cinderella (Tri Orisky
Pro Popelku) (1973). Vaclav Vorlicek, director. Amazon.com: Buy it onDVD.
Frequently requested on SurLaLune: A cult classic from
Czechoslovakia.
Once Upon a Time (1976).
Rolf Kauka, director. Italy / West Germany.
A blend of Diamonds and Toads and Cinderella,
this is a little known film that is a cult hit and classic to many, finally
released to DVD in 2006.
The Slipper and the Rose (1976). Bryan
Forbes, director. Amazon.com: Buy it onDVD or VHS.
Cast:
Richard Chamberlain .... Prince Edward
Gemma Craven .... Cinderella
Annette Crosbie .... Fairy Godmother
Edith Evans .... Dowager Queen
Christopher Gable .... John
Michael Hordern .... King
Margaret Lockwood .... Stepmother
Gemma Craven has the title role, but Richard Chamberlain
(The Thorn Birds) as the prince is better known to most audiences.
This British musical started out on the stage and then moved to screen.
Just remember that it is a musical and Chamberlain will sing quite early
in the movie, so don't be surprised.
"In the tiny kingdom of Euphrania, the King and his
court are most anxious to get Prince Edward wed. But Edward wants to marry
for love. Meanwhile, young Cinderella finds life drastically altered with
her father's death as she's forced to be a servant in her own house. But
a cheery fairy godmother helps her with her impossible tasks, and even
gets her to take an evening out at the King's bride-finding ball. But
when the magic wears off, and the prince with shoe-in-hand searches for
Cinderella and finds her, what is going to happen to Euphrania without
the needed marriage alliance to prevent war?" (IMDB.com)
Cindy (TV) (1978). William A. Graham,
director.
Cast:
Charlayne Woodard .... Cindy
Cleavant Derricks .... Michael Simpson
Mae Mercer .... Sara Hayes, stepmother
Clifton Davis .... Captain Joe Prince
"This version of the Cinderella tale with an all-black
cast has Cinderella, who wants to marry a dashing army officer, finding
out out that her father, who she thought had an important job at a big
hotel, is actually the men's room attendant. Her wicked stepmother finds
out, too, and complications ensue" (IMDB.com).
The Tender Tale of Cinderella Penguin (1981).
Janet Perlman, director. Amazon.com: Buy it onVHS.
ANIMATED SHORT: Nominated for an Academy Award. "Cinderella
has to stay home while her evil stepsisters go to the ball. You know the
rest except everyone here is a penguin (even the mice that become the
"horses") and the lost slipper is more like a swimming flipper" (IMDB.com).
Shelley Duvall's Faerie Tale Theatre:
Cinderella (1985) (TV). Amazon.com: Buy the series on DVD.
Cast:
Eve Arden ... Stepmother
Jennifer Beals ... Cinderella
Matthew Broderick ... Prince Henry
Jean Stapleton ... Fairy Godmother
This television series originally aired on
Showtime for six seasons and a total of 27 episodes. To see a full episode
list, go to Shelley Duvall's
Faerie Tale Theatre.
Ashpet: An American Cinderella (1990).
Tom Davenport, director. Davenport Films Production.
Amazon.com: Buy it on DVD or VHS.
Davenport
Films, an independent film company, has a wonderful
short film based on Cinderella, titled Ashpet. This is the same film company that produced Willa:
An American Snow White which has appeared on PBS. Please follow these
links or click on a photo still to visit their website and learn more
about this film. These movies are some of the best renditions of folklore
on film.
If the Shoe Fits (TV) (1990).
Tom Clegg, director. Also known as: Stroke of Midnight. Amazon.com: Buy it onVHS.
Cast:
Rob Lowe .... Francesco Salvitore
Jennifer Grey .... Kelly Carter/Prudence
"A modern Cinderella in Paris: While the plain Kelly
Carter jobs as a gadrobiere for the famous fashion designer Francesco,
she dreams of designing shoes for him. However she can't win his attention...
until she meets a good fairy on the street, who enchants a pair of Kelly's
shoes, so that she turns into supermodel Prudence whenever she wears them.
She attends one of Francesco's balls and immediately wins his heart. Now,
how can she make him love her real self?" (IMDB.com).
Into the Woods (1991) (TV). James
Lapine, director. Amazon.com: Buy it on DVDorVHS.
Cast:
Bernadette Peters .... The Witch
Chip Zien .... Baker
Joanna Gleason .... Baker's wife
Tom Aldredge .... Narrator/Mysterious Man
Robert Westenberg .... Wolf/Cinderella's Prince
Kim Crosby .... Cinderella
Danielle Ferland .... Little Red Riding Hood
Ben Wright .... Jack
Barbara Bryne .... Jack's mother
Merle Louise .... Grandmother/Cinderella's Mother/Giant
Chuck Wagner .... Rapunzel's Prince
Pamela Winslow .... Rapunzel
FILM OF ORIGINAL BROADWAY CAST PRODUCTION:
A baker and his wife journey into the woods in search of a cow, a red
cape, a pair of golden slippers and some magic beans to lift a curse
that has kept them childless. Tony Award winners Bernadette Peters,
Joanna Gleason and the rest of the original Broadway cast weave their
magic spell over you in Stephen Sondheim's masterpiece, directed by
James Lapine, a seamless fusion of fairy tale characters and what happens
after "happily ever after." With oft-recorded songs such as
"Children Will Listen," "No One is Alone," and "Into
the Woods" is a music lover's delight from start to finish--and
will forever cement Stephen Sondheim's unparalleled position as the
giant of the American musical theater.
Cinderella (1997) Amazon.com: Buy it onDVD or VHS.
Cast:
Whitney Houston .... Fairy Godmother
Bernadette Peters .... Cinderella's Stepmother
Jason Alexander .... Lionel
Whoopi Goldberg .... Queen Constantina
Paolo Montalban .... The Prince
Brandy Norwood .... Cinderella
This is the "remade for television" in the 1990s version
of Rodgers and Hammerstein's musical staring Brandy and Whitney Houston.
The cast is strong and multicultural, but there isn't much new to see
in the tale itself. The first version in 1957 stars Julie Andrews. This
second version stars Lesley Ann Warren. This later version made in 1997
stars Brandy and Whitney Houston.
A Tale of Cinderella (TV) (1998). Amazon.com: Buy it onDVD or VHS.
Cast:
Christianne Tisdale .... Cinderella
Sean Frank Sullivan .... Prince
MUSICAL
Ever After (1998). Andy Tennant, director. Amazon.com: Buy it onDVD or VHS.
Cast:
Drew Barrymore .... Danielle De Barbarac
Anjelica Huston .... Baroness Rodmilla De Ghent
Dougray Scott .... Prince Henry
Patrick Godfrey .... Leonardo da Vinci
Drew Barrymore is the spunky Cinderella in this movie
version of the tale. The movie is fun. I appreciated the screenplay's
hints at why Cinderella's stepmother (Angelica Huston) is so hateful to
her. This version is definitely one of my favorite screen versions.
"With the sudden death of her loving father, Danielle
is made a servant by her new stepmother. She also has two new stepsisters,
one quite kind but the other one really horrid. Still, Danielle grows
up to be a happy and strong-willed young lady, and one day her path crosses
that of handsome Prince Henry, who has troubles of his own at home. Luckily
the nice Leonardo da Vinci is on hand to help all round." (IMDB.com).
Stories From My Childhood: Cinderella (1999). Also known as: Mikhail Baryshnikov's Stories From My Childhood. Amazon.com:
Buy it onDVD.
ANIMATED SHORT from PBS TV SERIES: Cinderella features the voices of Robert Loggia and Sarah Jessica Parker.
The PBS series, Stories From My Childhood,
features animated shorts from Russia's Soyuzmultfilm Studios, one of the
most celebrated animation factories of the 20th century. Mikhail Baryshnikov
was co-executive producer of the new English versions, featuring well-known
actors' voices. This TV series and the subsequent DVDs collect several
of Soyuzmultfilm's most dazzling adaptations of European folklore. These
versions are often more accurate than the American film versions of the
same tales. Most of the films were originally produced in the 1950s and
'60s.
The Adventures of Cinderella's Daughter (2000). Scott Zakarin, director. Amazon.com: Buy it onDVD or VHS.
Cast:
Stan Lee .... The Priest
Joe Lando .... King Gregory
Liz Lavoie .... Queen Cinderella
Laurie Shiers Plaksin .... Cindy
Matthew Wagner .... Gavin
Jim Wise .... Fred the Fairy Godbrother
Queen Cinderella is blissfully married to the King (Joe
Lando) and is mom of the coolest Royal family in all the land. Her daughter
Cindy (Laurie Plaksin) is a teenage Princess who wishes more than anything
to be just an ordinary teenage girl. She has a crush on Gavin, a dashing
young commoner at her Medieval High School, a suitor her father would
surely not approve. Cindy's wish is answered when she meets her very own
Fairy Godbrother, Fred (Jim Wise). Fred uses his undeveloped magical powers
to help Cindy try out for the cheerleading squad, turn Gavin's rival for
Cindy's affection into an ape and even take Cindy on a magical journey
back in time to attend the wedding of Cinderella to the Prince-a wedding
that might have been foiled by the Wedding Warlock (Roger Rose) if not
for Cinderella's Fairy Godmother.
The 10th Kingdom (2000) (TV). David
Carson and Herbert Wise, directors. Amazon.com: Buy it on DVDorVHS.
Cast:
Kimberly Williams .... Virginia Lewis
Scott Cohen .... Wolf
John Larroquette .... Antony 'Tony' Lewis
Dianne Wiest .... The Evil Queen/Christine Lewis
Camryn Manheim .... Snow White
Ann-Margret .... Queen Cinderella
This epic 10-hour miniseries was a ratings
bust on television Kimberly Williams is Virginia, a waitress who still
lives with her janitor father (John Larroquette) and yearns for something
exciting to happen to her. Her wish comes true when she and her father
are transported from New York City into the nine kingdoms populated by
characters from fairy tales of yore. They team up with a dog who's really
a prince--Wendell, grandson of Snow White--changed into canine form by
the evil Queen (Dianne Wiest), who plots to usurp Wendell's throne. Father,
daughter, and his royal dogness are relentlessly pursued through the nine
kingdoms by the Troll King (Ed O'Neill) and his three bumbling and horrible
children, and the conflicted Wolf (Scott Cohen), who is allied with the
Queen but tames his inner beast and falls in love with Virginia. The
10th Kingdom is a special effects extravaganza. There is indeed, as
one character marvels, magic to behold here. But despite the Hallmark
brand name and the presence of a grown-up Snow White (Camryn Manheim)
and Cinderella (Ann-Margret), bewitched animals, magic mirrors, and trolls,
this is not kid's stuff. It can get scary, surprisingly violent, and quite
intense; you know, just like real fairy tales.
Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister (TV) (2002).
Gavin Millar, director.
Cast:
Stockard Channing .... Margarethe Fisher Van Den Meer
Azura Skye .... Iris Fisher
Trudie Styler .... Fortune Teller
Emma Poole .... Ruth Fisher
Jenna Harrison .... Clara Van Den Meer
Jonathan Pryce .... Master Schoonmacker
A made-for-TV movie featured on ABC. The movie is an adaptation
of Gregory Maguire's book of the same name. This movie has not been
released to DVD at this time.
DysEnchanted (2003). Terri
Miller, director.
Cast:
Laura Kightlinger .... Cinderella
Sarah Wynter .... Sleeping Beauty
Alexis Bledel .... Goldilocks
Jaime Bergman .... Alice
K.D. Aubert .... Little Red Riding Hood
Shiva Rose McDermott .... Snow White
Amy Pietz .... Clara
Jill Small .... Dorothy
James Belushi .... Doctor (The Shrink)
SHORT FILM: "Storybook characters Cinderella,
Sleeping Beauty, Snow White, Goldilocks, Alice, Dorothy, and Red Riding
Hood are in group therapy dishing and dealing with what comes after "happily
ever after." When Clara, a New Jersey divorcee, joins the group, she finds
out that while life is no fairy tale, it doesn't mean her dysenchantment
has to be terminal." (IMDB.com)
Ella Enchanted (2004). Tommy O'Haver,
director. Amazon.com: Buy it onDVD.
Cast:
Anne Hathaway .... Ella
Hugh Dancy .... Prince Charmont
Cary Elwes .... Prince Regent Edgar
Minnie Driver .... Mandy
Vivica A. Fox .... Fairy Lucinda
Anne Hathaway stars as Ella in the movie adaptation of
Gail Carson Levine's popular book. The movie is slated for an April 2004
release date in the U.S. (IMDB.com)
A Cinderella Story (2004). Mark Rosman,
director. Amazon.com: Buy it onDVD.
Cast:
Hilary Duff .... Sam Montgomery
Chad Michael Murray .... Austin Anderson
Brenda Song .... Kelly Anderson
Brad Bufanda .... David
Dan Byrd .... Carter Farrell
"Routinely exploited by her wicked stepmother, the
downtrodden Sam Martin is excited about the prospect of meeting her Internet
beau at the school's Halloween dance" (IMDB.com).
Happily N'ever After (2007). Paul J. Bolger
& Yvette Kaplan , directors. Amazon.com: Buy it onDVD.
Cast:
Sarah Michelle Gellar .... Ella
Patrick Warburton .... Prince Charming
Sigourney Weaver .... Stepmother, Frieda
Andy Dick .... Mambo
Wallace Shawn .... Munk
"Once upon a time will n'ever be the same again.
Sleeping Beauty, Rapunzel, and Jack from the Beanstalk are all about to
live happily ever after when the balance between good and evil gets thrown
out of whack. It's up to Cinderella - aka Ella (Sarah Michelle Gellar)
- to save the day by taking on her power-hungry stepmother, Frieda (Sigourney
Weaver). But this time, Ella will have to do it without her Prince Charming
(Patrick Warburton) as she joins forces with an unlikely army of dwarves,
faries, and the Wizard's bumbling assistants, Mambo (Andy Dick) and Munk
(Wallace Shawn). Your favorite fairy tales are turned upside down in this
funny, fast-paced adventure that teaches the lesson that - no matter who
you are - you have the power to affect how your story turns out!"
Cinderella (2007/8). Richard Pinto and Anil Gupta, writers. Hat Trick/BBC Northern Ireland Production for BBC One.
The second fairy tale in the BBC Fairy Tales anthology is Cinderella. Richard Pinto and Anil Gupta (Goodness Gracious Me, The Kumars at No 42) have chosen to update Cinderella. The original is thought to date back to ninth century China in which Yei-Hsien is helped by a ten-foot long fish, who proves every bit as capable as a fairy godmother, furnishing her with a dress made of kingfisher feathers and tiny gold shoes.
Richard and Anil have set their version in the world of anthropology, at a bustling university and asks the question: Who is really responsible for the evolution of the human race, man or woman?
"The story of Cinderella, which has been around for at least 2,000 years, addresses all the big fairy tale issues: oppression, injustice, and empowerment, oh, and getting dressed up in a fabulous outfit, obviously!" says Richard Pinto.
"Many would argue that it's the most famous of all fairy tales, so it was a daunting task to take something so well known and tell it in a new way, but I hope we've stayed true to the original spirit of the story.
"There was always an element of 'men versus women' in the original story (who's in charge of this relationship, Cinderella or the Prince?), we're just a bit more up front about it in our version," says Richard.
The delightful rom-com features the devilishly charismatic Professor Prince (James Nesbitt), who believes that the 'male of the species' is the reason we are all here today and university cleaner Cindy (Maxine Peake) who, despite her lack of academic education, is determined to prove him wrong.
Anil continues: "In our version Cindy is a cleaner at a university. She is deeply fascinated by anthropology, but despite being very bright and having a broad knowledge (self-taught) of the subject, she doesn't have the qualifications to pursue her dream of becoming an academic.
"She's kept in her place by two research students, Phoebe and Fenola (the ugly sisters), and the Head of the Anthropology department, Professor Brooks (the wicked stepmother).
"It looks like she's destined for a life below stairs, until the arrival at the university of Professor H Prince, a very modern academic, media savvy and photogenic, who's desperate to show the world his phallus..."
In terms of how they began research on their fairy tale, Richard adds:
"To understand what's really going on in fairy tales, to get to the root of the primal urges they describe, you have to revisit them all, from Hansel and Gretel to Rumpelstiltskin and back again. We also looked at the archaeological and anthropological debate surrounding the Great Leap Forward, a contentious period in human evolution when our ancestors suddenly became the dominant species on earth.
"Basically we still don't know why humans 'made it' and Neanderthals didn't, but we think it's either down to the feminine skills of language and communication, or the masculine skills of speed and agility. Basically the answer to this question is the ultimate answer to the battle of the sexes, who's best, men or women? This provides the bone of contention (bad pun, I know) between our two protagonists."
PLAY: J. M. Barrie, famous for penning Peter
Pan, wrote this Cinderella-themed play. This time Cinderella is Jane,
a poor London domestic who cares for four tiny orphans during the dark
days of WWI. The economic squalor and emotional deprivation of her existence
is alleviated only by the richness of her imagination. Jane lives in her
own fantasy world. She is really Cinderella, and she knows that someday
her invitation to the Prince's ball will come. The play was made into
a silent movie in 1925, directed by Herbert Brenon.
FULL-LENGTH PLAY: The prince has the
shoe. He's ready to wed. But who's the woman behind the foot? Two investigative
reporters—Deb Jabber from Action News Day Now and Sonny Glamour from Glitter
Kingdom Today—compete for the scoop of the century, interviewing everybody
from a fairy godmother in desperate need of a day-planner to mice in the
witness protection program. Look for cameos from Pinocchio, Jack and his
cow and other celebrities in this no-holds-barred exposé of the timeless
love story and what it means to find—and TELL—the truth.
Denys,
Chris, and Chris Harris. Cinderella. London: Josef
Weinberger.
Eiler, Jim. Cinderella. Music
by Jim Eiler and Jeanne Bargy. Adaptation and lyrics by Jim Eiler from
the fairy-tale by Charles Perrault. London:
Josef Weinberger.
MUSICAL: Pantomime. A pantomime in the true
English tradition for all seasons of the year. The glass slipper, Fairy
Godmother, Prince Charming, Wicked Stepmother and the Ugly Sisters will
recall fond childhood memories for adults and keep children spellbound
with its ageless and charming story of the girl who finally becomes a
Princess. Songs include "Hi Diddle Dee", "What's To Become Of Me?" and
"Sneeze Polka".
Fonte,
Henry and Victoria Holloway. Cinderella: The
True Story.Book by Henry Fonte
and Victoria Holloway. Music by Lee Ahlin. New York: Samuel French.
MUSICAL: Children's musical. This delightful
retelling of the classic story set in New Orleans during the Civil War
had adults and children laughing at the American Stage Children's Theatre.
The Cinderella character, Anne Marie Luise deVille, helps win a battle
for the Confederacy and then disappears. The governor announces a ball
to celebrate the victory. The fairy godmother, a Jamaican woman, flies
in and does a sprightly calypso number.
MUSICAL: As if Gladys, Cinderella's
fairy godmother, doesn't have enough problems, what is she going to do
with Alice's white rabbit, Harold (for that is the white rabbit's name).
Having taken a wrong turn at Albuquerque, Harold falls in the wrong hole
and lands right in Gladys' kingdom—just at the moment Cinderella's story
begins. Harold wants to leave, but Gladys is a fast thinker and decides
she could use his help to rescue Cinderella from her wicked stepmother.
Frakes, Jack. Final Dress Rehearsal. New
York: Samuel French.
SHORT PLAY: Farce. An amateur theatrical group's final
dress rehearsal of Cinderella is a disaster: Cinderella is late, the prompter
wants to play all the parts, the sassy stage crew is noisy, the author
feels her brainchild is being ruined and the director is distraught. The
stepsisters miss cues, sound-effects are played at the wrong speed, the
messenger crashes her bicycle and the fairy godmother can't find her wand.
Final Dress Rehearsal is among the most popular plays for high school
production according to the Interna- tional Thespian Society.
Frankonis, W. A.. A Tale of Cinderella.Book
by W. A. Frankonis. Music by Will Severin and George David Weiss. Lyrics
by George David Weiss. New York: Samuel French.
MUSICAL: Children's musical. A delightful
new spin on the classic tale set in Venice, this musical has lots of Italian
spice and fire. To find love and happiness, a self-reliant, strong and
beautiful Cin- derella must overcome a powerful amuletto d'amore to free
her father from her step- mother's mysterious spell. The Godmama wields
a magic spoon and the prince's Godpapa employs his magic sword.
FULL-LENGTH PLAY: "Break one-niner
for the Silver Princess...Come on back at me, Silver Princess." Who is
the Silver Princess and why is she driving all the good buddies from Upshaw
County crazy? Here's a chance for you to throw out your anchor, step down
off your four-wheeler and do a good, old-fashioned CB love story. Sweet
Rose Lee is living a life of pure misery. Nothing to do but wash and scrub
and paint and feed the hogs. She is constantly tormented by her evil stepmother,
Birdie Bonaventure, and her stepsisters, Biddie and Baby. Poor Rose Lee!
Her only pleasure is her secret CB radio which was left to her by her
dear old daddy. She may be Rose Lee at home but on the air she's the Silver
Princess and she drives the boys wild.
FULL-LENGTH PLAY: Reviews across the
country herald this new version—"only Peter Pan matches it for natural
hilarity. The two are alike in understanding what children want a play
to be: an extension of their own play with which they can fully identify...
it has comedy, poignancy, charm and enchantment in just the right amounts."
Glowacki, Janusz. Cinders.Translated
by Christina Paul. Music by Richard Peaslee. New York: Samuel French.
FULL-LENGTH PLAY: The New York Shakespeare
Festival had quite a success with this penetrating allegory about a totalitarian
police state by a Polish dissident playwright and novelist. In a reform
school for girls, near Warsaw. A documentary film director plans to do
a film of their production of the classic ''Cinderella''. The authorities
of the school welcome his arrival, as they believe his film will show
the world how enlightened the state can be in its institumail tions of
social welfare. The director plans to create a documentary whose theme
is how innocent children are rescued from the web of society. When the
girl playing Cinderella refuses to participate in this phony charade.
both the director and the school authorities collaborate in her punishment.
Gray, Nicholas Stuart. The Other Cinderella: A Three
Act Play For Children. London: Oxford University Press, 1958. [Currently
available from New York: Samuel French, 1977 and London: Josef Weinberger.]
FULL-LENGTH PLAY: A refreshingly alternative version of
the classic tale - Cinderella may be pretty, but she is incredibly precocious
and bad tempered, and her step-sisters are neither ugly or cruel but loving
and gentle. With the intervention of the meddlesome Demon, the Fairy sets
out to put things right and return the story of Cinderella back to its
original form, with disastrous and hilarious results.
Hammerstein
II,Oscar. Cinderella. Music
by Richard Rodgers. Book and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. London:
Josef Weinberger.
MUSICAL: Originally presented as a television
extravaganza, this famous fairy tale has been re-fashioned and set to
music by two great masters of the musical. The characters are given greater
depth plus a more human quality, and it is only through Cinderella's innocent
faith in a miracle that allows her wish to go to the ball to come true.
Musical highlights include "In My Own Little Corner," "A Lovely Night,"
"Do I Love You Because You're Beautiful?" and "Impossible."
FULL-LENGTH PLAY: Enchanting in its
wit, wisdom and absurdity, this fractured fairy tale turns convention
on its head with a modern and morally redeeming twist. When a troubled
Queen tastes Cinderina's apple cinnamon cake, she asks Cinderina to promise
to make her another for her son's 21st birthday. The cake sets off an
avalanche of events, upsetting the powers that be. You'll see your favorite
characters—the ugly sisters and that devious duchess, conniving in the
corridors with a wiley Lord Chancellor and a mad chef who insists on putting
glue in all his dishes. To save the castle's tourist industry, the prince
announces a cake competition, to be judged at his birthday ball! When
Hans, the castle's garbage man, is suspected of pilfering from the chef's
kitchen, Cinderina has to find ingredients for her special cake some other
way, Gunter, a village boy, and his mother and sisters rally. It is not
magic but a people's creative faith in themselves that wins in the end.
From one of Australia's leading writers for young audiences, this charming
play is an allegory with fun and romance for the young and deeper lessons
for all of us about power, ambition, optimism, trendiness, and self-doubt.
FULL-LENGTH PLAY: This is the Cinderella
play in which the famous Ashes appears. He's the magic cat, as you'd expect.
When Cinderella's left alone to do the work, Ashes helps her as easily
as he'd catch a mouse. When the others go to the ball, he stays with Cinderella.
He gives up his pumpkin for her coach and his nice fat mice to make the
horses (though he hopes he'll be there when they turn into mice again!).
SHORT PLAY: (Participation Play for
Children) A drama critic summed up a key advantage to these participation
plays saying, "Kids can't talk back to a television screen. In glorious
contrast is [this] 'Cinderella' in which members of the audience help
the show along!" As the action begins in this participation version of
the old favorite, small groups of children come on to the stage to help
Cinderella clean the stepmother's house before the terrible family returns.
The children then help an absentminded Fairy Godmother get Cinderella
dressed and ready for the ball; create the wild ride to the castle; and
provide a distraught King Ferdinand and a sorrowful prince with a queen
and ladies and gentlemen to dance with at the ball.
Kelly, Tim. Cinderella Meets the Wolfman!.Book by Tim Kelly. Music and Lyrics
by Jack Sharkey. New York: Samuel French.
MUSICAL: Cinderella encounters a Prince who
has inherited ''The Charming Curse'' and becomes a wolf every full moon.
Igor, hired by King and Queen Charming to keep an eye on their son, a
movie star who's come to attend the royal wedding (which will occur if
Prince Charming can take a bride without devouring her), and a gypsy who
can get a fortune for a genuine stuffed werewolf (she's got a silver bullet)
add to the hilarity.
Kidd, Virginia. Happily
Ever Once Upon. New York: Samuel French.
FULL-LENGTH PLAY: Parody. After twenty years of marriage,
Cinderella and Prince Charming have some problems: the Enchanted Kingdom
teeters on the brink of bankruptcy. Cinderella's fairy godmother is blackmailing
her, the Prince's adviser has one arm and one swan's wing and an unfortunate
habit of breaking everything he encounters, and Red Riding Hood has set
her cap for the Prince. Though hoping Rumplestilskin can spin gold from
straw, the Prince fears he may have to make the Enchanted Kingdom a tourist
attraction. Cinderella resolves their difficulties by confronting her
godmother and opening the Kingdom to writers who promise them royalties
from their stories.
Kuder, Edna. Cinderella.Book
and Lyrics by Edna Kuder. Music by Peter Larson. New York: Samuel French.
MUSICAL: Children's musical. This enchanting
version of the classic story is designed to teach children the joy of
being on stage. It is perfect to be performed by and for elementary school
children.
MUSICAL: A bewitching crew of classic characters
romp through a "happily ever after" kingdom in this musical fairy-tale.
Interweaving a hilarious mix of Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, the
Baker's Wife, Jack and the Beanstalk and Rapunzel in a multi-layered plot
which ends happily in Act One, the musical then explores "happily ever
after" in Act Two as previous actions come home to roost - with a vengeance!
MacCarthy.
John Bernard. Who Will Kiss
Cinderella?: A Romantic Comedy in Three Acts. London: George Roberts, 1929.
PLAY
MacGregor, Helen, and Stephen Chadwick.Roald Dahl's Cinderella. Vladimir Tarnopolski, composer. New York: A & C Black Publishers Ltd, 2008. Amazon.com: Buy the complete performance pack.
MUSICAL: Based on the "Revolting Rhyme" by Roald Dahl.
Marvin,
Blanche. Cinderella. In Plays for Children, Vol. II. New York: Samuel French.
SHORT PLAY: Cinderella rises from rags to
riches in this comedy of manners a la Oscar Wilde's The Importance
of Being Earnest. The ugly sisters are played by men and the Fairy
Godmother is Britannia.
McLoughlin, Patrick. Cinderladdin. New York: Samuel French.
FULL-LENGTH PLAY: Pantomime. Aladdin tells his mother
he's met a beautiful girl, Cinderella, and also acquired an old lamp.
She sends him out to get more laundry customers. Meanwhile, Cinderella
is forced to prepare her cruel stepsisters for the Ball where the Prince
will select a bride. The stepsisters leave and Aladdin happens by. Cinderella
explains her plight. The lamp's Genie gets Cinderella to the Ball despite
the wicked Uncle's plotting. She leaves at midnight minus the glass slipper.
With the lamp's help she acquires the Prince of her choice—Aladdin.
Montley, Patricia. "Cinderella." Not So
Grim Fairy Tales. New York:
Samuel French.
SHORT PLAY: Satire. Five scenes present unusual variations
on familiar tales. In "Little Red and the Big Bad She Wolf,"
Red is invited by Mae Wolf to quit Harvard Business School and get a start
in the service-selling business—despite Granny's opposition (she is Mae's
senior partner). In "Bumble Stiltskin and the Baby Business,"
Rumpel's put-upon wife implores the Queen to keep her royal baby and offers
to set up a Day Care Center if she gets government support. Also included
are "Snow White and the Anti-Freeze," "Jack and the Marijuana
Stalk," and "Cinderella."
Newton, Ruth. Cinderella. New
York: Samuel French.
SHORT PLAY: This version emphasizes audience participation.
The Fairy Godmother needs help from the audience because she is out of
practice and not at all certain her magic is going to work properly. Cinderella's
slipper is tried on youngsters in the audience, who are con- sulted as
to whether the wicked stepmother and stepsisters should be turned into
happy people. Cinderella is a natural, joyous girl with a bubbling sense
of humor and great honesty. Of course, she and the Prince live happily
ever after.
Nigro, Don. Cinderella Waltz.New
York: Samuel French.
FULL-LENGTH PLAY: Comedy. Rosey Snow
is trapped in a fairy tale world that is by turns funny and a little frightening,
with her stepsisters Goneril and Regan, her demented stepmother, her lecherous
father, a bewildered Prince, a fairy godmother who sings salty old sailor
songs, a troll and a possibly homicidal village idiot. This play investigates
the archetypal origins of the world's most popular fairy tale, contrasting
the familiar and charming Perrault version with the darker, more ancient
and disturbing tale recorded by the Brothers Grimm. Grotesque farce and
romantic fantasy blend in a fairy tale for adults.
PLAY: Pantomime. A classic fairy tale with
a twist. The two ugly sisters and the vicious step mother get their come-uppance,
but Cinders, in a thoroughly refreshing alternative, rejects the spoilt
and arrogant Prince in favour of the genuine and reliable Buttons.
"In the fullness of time, I think Stuart
Paterson's modern pantomimes may come to be seen as one of the outstanding
legacies of Scottish theatre."--Guardian
FULL-LENGTH PLAY: This Cinderella
is a compulsive martyr who'd love to have the whole world weep and say:
"Poor Cinderella," as she spoils life for her family. Her stepmother buys
her a Paris gown for the ball. Her stepsisters line her up an intriguing
date. But Cinderella prefers to suffer.
Robbins, Norman. Cinderella. New York: Samuel French.
FULL-LENGTH PLAY: Pantomime. Follows the famous story
in a straightforward version: though the traditional pantomime additions
are introduced, the narrative line remains the salient feature: the arrival
of the stepmother and her two horrific daughters; Cinderella's maltreatment
in the kitchen; the faithful Buttons; Cinderella's kindness to the old
woman who turns out to be the fairy godmother; the handsome Prince and
the Ball and all the rest of the famous story.
Rogers, June Walker. The Truth About
Cinderella. Book by June Walker Rogers. Music by Charles Strouse.
Lyrics by David Rogers. Woodstock, IL: Dramatic Publishing Company of
Chicago. Read
more about the play on the Dramatic Publishing website.
MUSICAL: Charles Strouse, the composer
of Bye, Bye Birdie, has written another score to David Rogers' lilting,
laughing lyrics. June Walker Rogers has provided a hilarious comedy-spoof
book based on Sir Osbert Sitwell's Cinderella Complex. Poor Cinderella?
Not this time! It's poor stepmother and sisters—sweetly, desperately trying
to drag Cinderella away from her beloved brooms and brushes to the ball!
Two godmothers—two! One tells Cinderella the truth that she must shape
up and stop making herself and everyone else miserable. The other gives
advice on how to make everyone even more miserable! One royal family—one!
The king, determined to marry off his son; the queen, determined not to.
The prince, a lyric tenor who says nothing. It's all upside down and all
laughs. True to tradition, Cinderella wins her prince but there is an
interesting switch.
St. John, Billy. Cindy Ella's Going To the Ball,
Baby!. New York: Samuel French.
SHORT PLAY: Comedy. This hilarious takeoff on Cinderella
is set in a contemporary high school at prom time. Cindy Ella's stepsisters,
Prissy and Missy, are hoping that Joe Prince will dance with them, while
her stepmother hopes to find husband number three among the teachers chaperoning.
Big Mama arrives in a puff of smoke to make sure that Cindy gets to the
prom and hooks up with dreamboat Joe Prince. But is he really her Prince
Charming?
SHORT PLAY OR READER'S THEATRE: A
menage of the "Hansel and Gretel," "Little Red Riding Hood" and "Cinderella"
stories. Part of the full-length play titled Opened Mail.
Wakefield, Colin. Cinderella. Book
by Colin Wakefield. Music and lyrics by Kate Edgar.London: Josef Weinberger.
PLAY: Pantomime. Probably the best-loved
pantomime of them all, in a version complete with all the traditional
trappings. All your favourite characters are here: Buttons, Cinders, the
Baron, Prince Charming, Dandini and of course those awful, horrible ugly
sisters. Combined with specially composed music, plenty of audience participation
and not forgetting that crucial crystal slipper, you have the ideal pantomime
for all the family.
Walser, Robert. "Aschenbrodel (Cinderella)." Robert Walser Rediscovered: Stories, Fairy-Tale Plays, and Critical
Responses. Mark Harman, editor. Walter Arndt, translator. Hanover,
NH : Published for Dartmouth College by University Press of New England,
1985. Buy
the book in hardcover from Amazon.com.