Alice's Adventures in Wonderland: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Author Avatar]]: In-universe, Lewis Carroll becomes the White Rabbit.
* [[Author Avatar]]: In-universe, Lewis Carroll becomes the White Rabbit.
* [[Axe Crazy]]: The Queen of Hearts and the Cook.
* [[Axe Crazy]]: The Queen of Hearts and the Cook.
* [[Billing Displacement]]: From the promotional materials and Opus Arte's DVD trailer, you'd think that the Mad Hatter was a much bigger role. If this were a musical, he'd qualify as [[Minor Character Major Song]].
* [[Billing Displacement]]: From the promotional materials and Opus Arte's DVD trailer, you'd think that the Mad Hatter was a much bigger role. If this were a musical, he'd qualify as [[Minor Character, Major Song]].
* [[Butt Monkey]]: The Dormouse.
* [[Butt Monkey]]: The Dormouse.
* [[The Cast Showoff]]: The Mad Hatter taps because Wheeldon wanted to take advantage of the original dancer's skill.
* [[The Cast Showoff]]: The Mad Hatter taps because Wheeldon wanted to take advantage of the original dancer's skill.
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* [[God Save Us From the Queen]]
* [[God Save Us From the Queen]]
* [[Gorn]]: "Pig and Pepper," especially in the original version. It's the ballet's only real example of [[Grimmification]].
* [[Gorn]]: "Pig and Pepper," especially in the original version. It's the ballet's only real example of [[Grimmification]].
* [[He Went That Way]]: To throw the Queen off at one point during the chase sequence.
* [[He Went That Way!]]: To throw the Queen off at one point during the chase sequence.
* [[Henpecked Husband]]: The King of Hearts, who is even pecked by a flamingo at one point.
* [[Henpecked Husband]]: The King of Hearts, who is even pecked by a flamingo at one point.
* [[Heterosexual Life Partners]]: The Mad Hatter and the March Hare are very demonstrative with each other, quite sweetly so in the final act.
* [[Heterosexual Life Partners]]: The Mad Hatter and the March Hare are very demonstrative with each other, quite sweetly so in the final act.
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* [[Off With His Head]]
* [[Off With His Head]]
* [[Only Sane Man]]: Alice, the Knave, and the White Rabbit.
* [[Only Sane Man]]: Alice, the Knave, and the White Rabbit.
* [[Out of Genre Experience]]: The tap-dancing Mad Hatter.
* [[Out-of-Genre Experience]]: The tap-dancing Mad Hatter.
* [[Post-Kiss Catatonia]]: The King tries to induce this in the Queen during the chase, but it only works for a couple of seconds.
* [[Post-Kiss Catatonia]]: The King tries to induce this in the Queen during the chase, but it only works for a couple of seconds.
* [[The Power of Love]]: How Alice and the Knave manage to win everyone to their side.
* [[The Power of Love]]: How Alice and the Knave manage to win everyone to their side.
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* [[A Spot of Tea]]: Although only the March Hare seems to get any.
* [[A Spot of Tea]]: Although only the March Hare seems to get any.
* [[Time Stands Still]]: Happens for a few seconds during the Tea Party.
* [[Time Stands Still]]: Happens for a few seconds during the Tea Party.
* [[Tiny Guy Huge Girl]]: This ''may'' be part of the joke in the Queen's Jam Tart Adagio, depending on the casting.
* [[Tiny Guy, Huge Girl]]: This ''may'' be part of the joke in the Queen's Jam Tart Adagio, depending on the casting.
* [[True Companions]]: After the trial, everyone joins up with Alice and the Knave to save them from the Queen of Hearts.
* [[True Companions]]: After the trial, everyone joins up with Alice and the Knave to save them from the Queen of Hearts.



Revision as of 17:36, 26 January 2014

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (2011) is a full-evening story ballet adapted from Alice in Wonderland, with choreography by Christopher Wheeldon and music by Jody Talbot. The ballet was co-produced by the Royal Ballet and the National Ballet of Canada, both of which have staged their own productions. It is scheduled to debut in the USA in late 2012, when the NBC plans to tour with it, and will also be aired live in movie theatres for one performance in 2013. Opus Arte released Alice on DVD in 2011.

In the original version, Act I opens with a garden party at the Liddell household, where an adolescent Alice gives one of the young gardeners, Jack, a tart. However, Mrs. Liddell accuses Jack of stealing the tart and fires him, much to Alice's dismay. The party itself includes such local notables as a Rajah, the vicar, the verger, a magician, and Lewis Carroll. When Carroll asks Alice to pose for a photograph, the lighting changes, Carroll's photography bag expands, and Carroll turns into the White Rabbit. Alice falls through the photography bag and winds up in Wonderland. Among other adventures, she encounters Wonderland's version of Jack, the Knave, who is on the run from the Queen of Hearts.

Act II is set at the Court. Besides playing croquet with flamingos and hedgehogs, Alice sees the Knave again. But he is soon arrested and put on trial. Although he and Alice eventually manage to convince almost everyone in the court of his innocence, thanks to The Power of Love, the Queen of Hearts tries to execute him herself. Alice manages to knock over the entire Court before waking up in the twenty-first century, suggesting that this may have been a Dream Within a Dream.

The revised 2012 staging breaks the evening into three acts. Act I now incorporates more dancing for Alice and the Knave, and ends right before Alice's encounter with the Cheshire Cat. The DVD preserves the two-act version.

Tropes used in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland include: