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This production has been made possible through the combined efforts of ENG 170 & 270 (Technical & Advanced Technical Theatre), ENG 172 (Intro to Stage Lighting and Sound), and ENG 290 (Plays in Production) the ur international theatre program artistic director nigel maister production manager gordon rice administrator katie farrell assistant technical director sarah eisel props master/production associate mary reiser costume shop manager nadine brooks taylor box office & front-of-house manager angela giuseppetti assistant costume shop manager grace interlichia senior costume shop intern jennifer uvina costume shop intern elizabeth o'neil wardrobe supervisor lakiesha holyfield assistant props masters lydia jimenez & penina rubin props intern natasha sacoto scene shop assistants cassandra donatelli & sam higgins social media intern & pr assistant michael tamburrino publicity interns stella kammel, fang ning (nancy) wang, milan byrdwell, bingqing (chrissy) guo & minsi lai theatre interns naomi everhart & devin goodman program information compiled by penina rubin URITP photographer adam fenster URITP videographer xuan (amy) zhang & brian giacalone production trailers by brian giacalone URITP webmaster zachary kimball graphic, program & poster design i:master/studios at [email protected] Kenneth Apostolakos - Megan Arnold - Danielle Bendesky - Daniel Bogucki - Elizabeth Bradley - Danielle Branton Halle Burns - Zachary Cicero - June Clayton - Julia Cowan - Brandyn Devanney - Mathew Ervin - Elizabeth Fox Jordan Golinowski - Chandler Haugh - Bryan Hoffman - Todd Kelmar - Garrett Kesel - Nicholas Kollias- Michael La Porte - Woo Jong Lee - Hannah Lewis - Thomas Marone - Brian Miers - Nicholas Napolitan - Ben O'Halloran Antonio Ortega - Mark Palmiere - Adam Parker - Nicholas Potter - Penina Rubin - William Ruiz - Isabelle Schmit Eun Won Seo - Matthew Szeto - Michael Tamburrino - Zechariah Tredenick - Derek Wager - Devin White special thanks Joël Pommerat - Anne de Amezaga - Olivia Burton - Manisha Snoyer - Robert Stanton Applied Audio and Theatre Supply - Bruce Stockton - Jeff Englander - Kevin Bruce Melissa Becker - Prof. Russell Peck - Deborah Leinbach - Macie McGowan - Penina Rubin Murie Gillett - Halle Burns - Daniel Bendesky - Kathryn Loveless - Derek Wager Zoe Netter - Gordon Rice - Rory Blunt - Max Kinder - Joan, Ellis Wren, Dylan Rhys Jubett-Bauer Carlotta Gambato, Ronni Pavan and Lulu and Sofia Greg Ruce at Vance Curves Metal Art - URMC Orthotics Department at Clinton Crossings Dr. Julia Nathan - Fran Lipsky-Burns This production of Cinderella is dedicated to the memory of Anna Kroup, a valued and deeply mourned member of the Todd Theatre family. 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Fill out the pledge form on the facing page. the university of rochester international theatre program presents by joël pommerat translated by emma laurent directed & set design by nigel maister costume design by tilly grimes lighting design by solomon weisbard sound design by obadiah eaves video & projection design by c. andrew bauer production staff production stage manager ................................................................. kimberly roberts assistant production stage manager ..................................................... alison schaefer assistant stage managers ........................................................... christi brodeur/video ........................................................................................... stephanie busch/costumes .................................................................................................. elizabeth fox/run crew ................................................................................................................ haoru li/props .............................................................................................. richard munson/run crew ..................................................................................................... ben o'halloran/lights ...................................................................................................... daniel parker/sound ....................................................................................................... fulei peng/run crew ................................................................................................... nicholas potter/props ............................................................................................... jiayu (kate) tian/run crew .......................................................................................... jiahe (abby) wang/costumes .................................................................................................... renjin zhao/run crew master electrician ........................................................................... cassandra donatelli assistant master electricians ................................ elizabeth bradley & todd kelmar audiovisual engineer ................................................................................. theo lincoln assistant audiovisual engineer ................................................................... kyle meyers scenic painters .............................. danielle bendesky, halle burns & lydia jimenez hair & makeup ................................................................ grace elizabeth interlichia stitcher ............................................................................................... melanie weekes cutter/draper ........................................................................................ sara gallagher assistant to the costume designer ................................................. alexandra rozansky assistant director ...................................................................................... penina rubin this production was made possible, in part, by the ellen miller '55 endowment for theater productions cinderella runs approximately 2 hour and 05 minutes with a 15 minute intermission joël pommerat b. 1963 J oël Pommerat is an award-winning contemporary French playwright who developed a love of theater at the age of 12 when he first attended the Festival d’Avignon. At 18, he became an actor in a regional theater company, but quickly realized that he wanted to be a playwright and director. He founded the Compagnie Louis Brouillard in 1990 and since then has written and directed two dozen plays. Pommerat has been (until very recently) dedicated exclusively to staging his own works, three of which have been adapted from fairy tales: Le petit chaperon rouge (Little Red Riding Hood, 2004), Pinocchio (2008), and Cendrillon (Cinderella, 2011). In an interview with Christian Longchamp, Pommerat explained how his interest in the world of fairy tales, and in particular Cinderella, stems from its ability not only to affect children, but also to hold emotional resonance for adults. Pommerat speaks about creating a Cinderella that focuses on the protagonist’s 1911-1983 bereavement over her dead mother; creating a less violent and more complex central character. Pommerat has earned many accolades for his dramatic writing, including the Grand Prix for Dramatic Literature (Les Marchands), 2010 Molière Award for Best Company (Cercles/Fictions), 2011 Molière Awards for Best Living Francophone Author and Best Company (Ma chambre froide), and 2006 Critic’s Prize for Best Work in the French Language (Cet enfant). He was an artist-in-residence at the Théâtre des Bouffes du Nord in Paris (at the invitation of Peter Brook), and stayed through 2010 after which he became associate artist at the Odéon Theater of Europe (2010-2013) and at the National Theater of Belgium. Pommerat is currently preparing his first theater piece in English, a production of Cinderella with American actors that opens at New York Theatre Workshop in May 2014. C. Andrew Bauer (Video Design) Previous Todd Theatre production: The Adding Machine (dir. Nigel Maister). NYC: CQ/CX, co-design with Peter Nigrini (dir. David Leveaux, Atlantic Theater Company); An Error of the Moon, written by Luigi Creatore (dir. Kim Weild, Theater Row); Detour, 5 Minutes (New York Live Arts) and Passage (LIU), all with Amanda Selwyn Dance; The Diary of a Teenage Girl, (dirs. Sarah Cameron Sunde and Rachel Eckerling, 3LD Art and Technology Center); Romeo and Juliet (dir. Tony Speciale, CSC); and Milk-n-Honey for Lightbox Theater Company (dir. Ellen Beckerman, 3LD Art and Technology Center, NYC; Ko Festival, Amherst College). Regional: Hydrogen Jukebox (dir. Lawrence Edelson, Fort Worth Opera). As Associate Video Designer, Broadway: The Best Man (dir. Michael Wilson, Schoenfeld Theatre), Fela! (dir. Bill T. Jones, Eugene O'Neill Theatre), 9 to 5: the Musical (dir. Joe Mantello, Marquis Theatre) and Lestat (dir. Robert Jess Roth, Palace Theater). As Associate Video Designer, Off Broadway: Here Lies Love (dir. Alex Timbers, Public Theatre), Far from Heaven (dir. Michael Greif, Playwrights Horizons),Fetch Clay, Make Man (dir. Des McAnuff, NYTW); The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Deity (dir. Eddie Torres, Second Stage) and Wings (dir. John Doyle, Second Stage). As Associate Video Designer, Regional: Sleeping Beauty Wakes, (dir. Rebecca Taichman, McCarter Theater, NJ; LaJolla Theater, CA), The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Deity (dir. Eddie Torres, Geffen Theatre; dir. Jaime Casteñeda, Dallas Theater Center), and Before Night Falls (dir. David Gately), Angels in America (dir. David Gately) and Frau Margot (dir. Frank Corsaro), all at Fort Worth Opera. As Associate Video Designer, International: Fela! (dir. Bill T. Jones, Royal National Theatre, UK). Awards: 2010 Innovative Theater Award for Fetes De La Nuit (dir. Kim Weild, Ohio Theater); Design for Milk-n-Honey featured in USA Exhibition “From the Edge,” 2011 Prague Quadrennial. Andrew was a member of the 1998-1999 Apprentice Company at Actors Theatre of Louisville. He also edited and produced Brooklyn Bound, a narrative feature that premiered at the 2004 Tribeca Film Festival. artist bios Emma Laurent (Translator) is an American translator, poet, and classical pianist. She specializes in adapting contemporary French theater for American audiences. Laurent has translated five Joël Pommerat plays including Little Red Riding Hood, Pinocchio, and I Tremble (I and II), published in Yale Theater Magazine, and Ma Chambre Froide, for which she received the SACD translation prize in 2012. In 2013, she was awarded residencies at the Cité des Artes in Paris from Ville de Paris and the Om Ledig House, through the Amazon Translation Prize. Tilly Grimes (Costume Design) is a European stage designer currently working between Europe and New York. Awards include The Balsamo Grand for Emerging Immigrant Artists, The Irish Arts Design Award, and Irish Times Theatre Award Nomination. Favorite credits include Martin Crimp’s Caligula, Mark Lamos’ Twelfth Night, and David Lee’s Present Laughter. In America Tilly’s work has been seen at Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Two Rivers Theatre Company, Trinity Repertory Company, New World Stages, La Ma Ma, Clubbed Thumb, Here Arts Centre, New Georges, Ars Nova and Theatre Row New York. Tilly has been a guest artist and guest designer at The Juilliard School, New York University, Fordham University, PPAS in NYC and Trinity College Dublin. Tilly is co-artistic director of London/Parisian Theatre Company ‘SavageCharm’. She received her M.F.A from NYU Tisch School and teaches at Brown University’s directing MFA program. Solomon Weisbard (Lighting Design)'s selected credits include Stones in his Pockets (Yale Rep), Lion in Winter, A Class Act (Berkshire Theatre Group), White’s Lies (New World Stages); The Film Society (Keen Co. / Theatre Row), I Came to Look for You on Tuesday (La Mama),Rite of Spring (Martha Graham Dance Co.), Christina Anderson’s Hollow Roots (Public Theatre Under the Radar), Agamemnon (11th Hour / La Mama); Faust, The Barber of Seville (Tri-Cities Opera); 9 to 5, A Chorus Line, All Shook Up (MerryGo-Round Playhouse); Frank London’s A Night in the Old Marketplace (Merkin Hall and international tour); What of the Night, St. Joan of the Stockyards (Barnard College). Original full-length dance/movement pieces with Alethea Adsitt, Jennifer Archibald, Julian Barnett (set), Ximena Garnica/Leimay, Lane Gifford, Ofelia Loret de Mola/danscores (set and lighting), The Nerve Tank (set and lighting), Patrick Lovejoy, Stefanie Nelson (set and lighting), WaxFactory (as featured in American Theatre magazine), and three new works as associate set designer with renowned choreographer Bill T. Jones. He is a graduate of Ithaca College and the Yale School of Drama. www.solweisbard.com Obadiah Eaves (Sound Design) has lost count of the number of productions he has designed at Todd Theater over the past eighteen years, but thinks it's more than thirty. His work has appeared on Broadway in The Assembled Parties; Harvey; A Life In The Theatre; Collected Stories; Accent On Youth; Come Back, Little Sheba; The Lieutenant of Inishmore; and Shining City. He created music and sound for the original productions of works by David Mamet, Woody Allen, Eric Bogosian, Ethan Coen, and Suzan-Lori Parks. Other recent Off-Broadway and regional work includes The Unavoidable Disappearance of Tom Durnin; If There Is, We Haven't Found It Yet (Roundabout); Oblivion (Westport Country Playhouse); and The Total Bent (Public). Awards: Lortel, Viv, and BACC awards. TV: HBO, Nickelodeon, Discovery, TLC, History Channel; also Fisher-Price toys. cast a female narrator who is heard but not seen .... patricia lewis a man who makes movements while she speaks .... charles lehner the very young girl .... zoe netter the mother .... ellen swanson the father .... travis j. kohler the stepmother .... kathryn loveless the big sister .... halle burns the little sister .... leah mould the fairy .... giulia perucchio the very young prince .... shane r. saxton the king .... david libbey two guards (and others) .... alberto carrillo casas & nathan contino It is grown people who make the nursery stories; all children do, is jealously preserve the text. Robert Louis Stevenson cinderella in the european tradition T he Cinderella story is one of the most widely known fairytales. Versions of it are found throughout the world and appear in many forms. The one that has permeated today's popular culture finds its origins in Charles Perrault's tale Cendrillon, ou la petite pantoufle de verre (Cinderella, or the Little Glass Slipper) which was first published in Histoires ou contes du temps passé (Stories or Fairy Tales from Past Times) in 1697. In this version of the story, Cinderella’s father remarries a woman with two daughters, who force Cinderella to do menial chores all day and night, after which she curls up in her barren room by the fireplace, resulting in her face and body getting covered in cinders. When the rest of the family leaves for a ball hosted by the Prince, Cinderella begins to cry. Her fairy godmother magically appears and casts a spell for Cinderella to go to the ball, turns a pumpkin into a carriage, mice into horses, a rat into a coachman, lizards into footmen, and Cinderella’s rags into a beautiful gown and pair of glass slippers. She warns Cinderella that the spell will break at midnight and that she must return before then. At the ball, the Prince becomes entranced by Cinderella, and in her haste to return home before midnight, Cinderella loses one of her glass slippers. The Prince travels around the kingdom, trying the shoe on all women to see who it fits in order to locate the slipper’s owner. The stepmother and stepsisters try to interfere and win the Prince over before he can try the slipper on Cinderella, but when he finally does so, the slipper fits perfectly. She marries the prince and grants her stepsisters forgiveness for all their cruelty. This tale, however, is far from the only version or variation of Cinderella which exists. The earliest published Cinderella tale found in Europe appeared in Italy as a part of Giambattista Basile’s Pentamerone (Day 1, Tale 6), published in 1634, called "La Gatta Cenerentola" or Cat Cinderella. In this tale a young girl named Zezolla, the only daughter of a Prince, plots with her governess to kill her stepmother, and succeeds in doing so by having the lid of a chest fall on the stepmother, crushing her neck. The Prince then told him to look at the blood pouring forth. That is the way with amputations. They just don't heal up like a wish. The prince was looking for a wife. The other sister cut off her heel but the blood told as blood will. The prince was getting tired. He began to feel like a shoe salesman. But he gave it one last try. This time Cinderella fit into the shoe like a love letter into its envelope. At the wedding ceremony the two sisters came to curry favor and the white dove pecked their eyes out. Two hollow spots were left like soup spoons. 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, never getting a middle-aged spread, their darling smiles pasted on for eternity. Regular Bobbsey Twins. That story. in search of cinderella cinderella by sylvia plath The prince leans to the girl in scarlet heels, Her green eyes slant, hair flaring in a fan Of silver as the rondo slows; now reels Begin on tilted violins to span The whole revolving tall glass palace hall Where guests slide gliding into light like wine; Rose candles flicker on the lilac wall Reflecting in a million flagons' shine, And glided couples all in whirling trance Follow holiday revel begun long since, Until near twelve the strange girl all at once Guilt-stricken halts, pales, clings to the prince As amid the hectic music and cocktail talk She hears the caustic ticking of the clock. by shel silverstein From dusk to dawn, From town to town, Without a single clue, I seek the tender, slender foot To fit this crystal shoe. From dusk to dawn, I try it on Each damsel that I meet. And I still love her so, but oh, I've started hating feet. george méliès's cendrillon, 1899 cinderella by anne sexton You always read about it: the plumber with the twelve children who wins the Irish Sweepstakes. From toilets to riches. That story. Or the nursemaid, some luscious sweet from Denmark who captures the oldest son's heart. from diapers to Dior. That story. Or a milkman who serves the wealthy, eggs, cream, butter, yogurt, milk, the white truck like an ambulance who goes into real estate and makes a pile. From homogenized to martinis at lunch. Or the charwoman who is on the bus when it cracks up and collects enough from the insurance. From mops to Bonwit Teller. That story. Once the wife of a rich man was on her deathbed and she said to her daughter Cinderella: Be devout. Be good. Then I will smile down from heaven in the seam of a cloud. The man took another wife who had two daughters, pretty enough but with hearts like blackjacks. Cinderella was their maid. She slept on the sooty hearth each night and walked around looking like Al Jolson. Her father brought presents home from town, jewels and gowns for the other women but the twig of a tree for Cinderella. She planted that twig on her mother's grave and it grew to a tree where a white dove sat. Whenever she wished for anything the dove would drop it like an egg upon the ground. The bird is important, my dears, so heed him. Next came the ball, as you all know. It was a marriage market. The prince was looking for a wife. All but Cinderella were preparing and gussying up for the event. Cinderella begged to go too. Her stepmother threw a dish of lentils into the cinders and said: Pick them up in an hour and you shall go. The white dove brought all his friends; all the warm wings of the fatherland came, and picked up the lentils in a jiffy. No, Cinderella, said the stepmother, you have no clothes and cannot dance. That's the way with stepmothers. Cinderella went to the tree at the grave and cried forth like a gospel singer: Mama! Mama! My turtledove, send me to the prince's ball! The bird dropped down a golden dress and delicate little slippers. Rather a large package for a simple bird. So she went. Which is no surprise. Her stepmother and sisters didn't recognize her without her cinder face and the prince took her hand on the spot and danced with no other the whole day. As nightfall came she thought she'd better get home. The prince walked her home and she disappeared into the pigeon house and although the prince took an axe and broke it open she was gone. Back to her cinders. These events repeated themselves for three days. However on the third day the prince covered the palace steps with cobbler's wax and Cinderella's gold shoe stuck upon it. Now he would find whom the shoe fit and find his strange dancing girl for keeps. He went to their house and the two sisters were delighted because they had lovely feet. The eldest went into a room to try the slipper on but her big toe got in the way so she simply sliced it off and put on the slipper. The prince rode away with her until the white dove marries Zezolla's governess, who turns out to be worse than the first stepmother, pampering her own six daughters and forcing Zezolla to reside in the kitchen and work as a servant. Her father returns from one of his many trips abroad with a seedling date tree. Zezolla plants the seedling, which quickly grows into a tree the size of a woman; it has a fairy living inside it. The fairy gives Zezolla everything she asks for, including coaches and dresses to attend the King's parties, where the King takes notice of her and sends a servant to follow her and discover her identity. Zezolla successfully is able to outwit the servant until her third escape when, in her anxiety to leave, she drops one of her shoes. The King then orders a search for the owner of the shoe, and when he approaches Zezolla with the shoe, it darts out of his hands and onto her foot on its own accord. The King makes Zezolla his queen. Another notable version of the Cinderella story appears in Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm’s collection Children’s and Household Tales, published in 1812, where she is known by the name Aschenputtel. In this tale, Aschenputtel's widowed father marries a woman with two daughter of her own. The stepmother and stepsisters charge Aschenputtel with picking peas and lentils out of the ashes in the kitchen. Grieving over her dead mother, Aschenputtel plants a hazel tree over the grave of her mother. The tree grows, and a little white bird perches on it. The bird brings Aschenputtel anything she wishes, including a gold and silver dress in order to attend the king's three-day festival. Each day of the festival, the prince is enamored of Aschenputtel, but she runs off before he can escort her home. On the third day, the prince smears a staircase with pitch to trap her, but the result is only partially successful: only one of Aschenputtel's shoes gets stuck. The prince announces that he will marry whomever the shoe fits. The elder and younger stepsisters, given the opportunity to try on the shoe, cut off their big toe and heel respectively to make it fit, but both times the prince is warned of their deceit by a pair of pigeons. The prince finally tries the shoe on Aschenputtel. It fits perfectly. At the wedding, the pigeons that sit on Aschenputtel's shoulders peck out the eyes of the stepsisters. china: yeh hsien hodopis egypt: r the international cinderella I t is not possible to pinpoint the origin of Cinderella as it originated from the oral tradition of folklore and has appeared across the globe in almost every culture. The specifics of the story change with every different telling, but the underlying morality and themes remain the same, adapted to fit the culture in which they originate. One of the oldest records of a Cinderella tale is the story of Rhodopis (“rosy-cheeked”) which was chronicled by the Greek historian Strabo around 1st century BC. This version tells the story a Greek slave, Rhodopis, who is sold to work in an Egyptian household. Rhodopis is teased by the other servant girls for her light-colored eyes and fair complexion, and so is treated harshly and made to do more work than anyone else. When she's on her own, Rhodopis dances, which her master sees and likes. He gives her a pair of rose-gilded slippers, making the other servant girls jealous. The Pharaoh then holds a celebration in Memphis, which the other servant girls prevent Rhodopis from attending by giving her a long list of chores to complete. Washing clothes by the river, the god Horus, in falcon form, swoops down and grabs one of her slippers. He then carries the slipper to the Pharaoh and drops it onto his head. The Pharaoh, recognizing this as a sign from the god, seeks out the owner of the slipper in order to marry her. Rhodopis tries to hide from the Pharaoh when he arrives at her house, but he sees her and asks her to try on the slipper. The slipper fits onto her foot and she produces the other slipper to prove that they are, in fact, her slippers, after which the Pharaoh declares he will marry her. Other notable versions include Yeh-Hsien from China which was published in the 9th century compilation, Micellaneous Morsels from Youyang, Rashin Coatie, a Scottish fairy tale collected by Joseph Jacobs in More English Fairy Tales, and Kongji in the story Kongji and Patzzi from Korea which dates from the Joseon Dynasty. Cinderella exists in many forms from every corner of the globe, from Creole stories to Russian fables. lundi matin (or the song the little girl sings) Lundi matin, L'emp'reur, sa femme et le p'tit prince Sont venus chez moi Pour me serrer la pince Comm' j'étais parti Le p'tit prince a dit Puisque c'est ainsi Nous reviendrons mardi. On Monday morning The emperor, his wife and the little prince, Came to my house To shake my hand. Since I had left, The little prince said, "Since this is how it is, We'll come back on Tuesday." Mardi matin, L'emp'reur, sa femme et le p'tit prince Sont venus chez moi Pour me serrer la pince Comm' j'étais parti Le p'tit prince a dit Puisque c'est ainsi Nous reviendrons mercredi. On Tuesday morning The emperor, his wife and the little prince, Came to my house To shake my hand. Since I had left, The little prince said, "Since this is how it is, We'll come back on Wednesday." Mercredi matin, L'emp'reur, sa femme et le p'tit prince Sont venus chez moi Pour me serrer la pince Comm' j'étais parti Le p'tit prince a dit Puisque c'est ainsi Nous reviendrons jeudi. On Wednesday morning The emperor, his wife and the little prince, Came to my house To shake my hand. Since I had left, The little prince said, "Since this is how it is, We'll come back on Thursday." ... ... Dimanche matin, L'emp'reur, sa femme et le p'tit prince Sont venus chez moi Pour me serrer la pince Comm' j'étais parti Le p'tit prince a dit Puisqu'il n'y est plus Nous ne reviendrons plus. On Sunday morning The emperor, his wife and the little prince, Came to my house To shake my hand. Since I had left, The little prince said, "Since she's not here anymore, We won't come back again." the many names of cinderella Cendrillon (France) c Finette (France) c Donkey Skin (France) c Aschenputtel (Germany) Allerleirauh (Germany) c Zezolla (Italy) c Preziosa (Italy) c Katie Woodencloak (Norwegian) Rhodopis (Egypt) c Yeh-Hsien (China) c Bawang Merah (Malaysia) c Bawang Putih (Indonesia) Abadeha (Philippines) c Tam (Vietnam) c Kao (Thailand) c Kongjwi (Korea) c Pear Blossom (Korea) c Chinye (West Africa) c Little Cat Skin (United States) c Settareh (Persia) c Angkat (Cambodia) c Cinduri (India) c Mossycoat (England) c Rashin Coatie (Scotland) c Cap-o’-Rushes (England) c Oona (Ireland) c Vasilisa (Russia) scotland: rash in coatie korea: kongji adaptations C inderella has been adapted many times for the stage and screen. In 1950, Walt Disney Animation Studios produced Cinderella, based on the Perrault telling of Cendrillon and released by RKO Radio Pictures. The animated feature was directed by Clyde Geronimi, Hamilton Luske, and Wilfred Jackson; the songs were written by Mack David, Jerry Livingston, and Al Hoffman. There are two direct-to-video sequels released by Disney, Cinderella II: Dreams Come True (2002) and Cinderella III: A Twist in Time (2007). A musical version of Cinderella, also based on the Perrault tale, with music by Richard Rodgers and book and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II aired on CBS in 1957. This television musical was first performed on stage in 1958 at the London Coliseum and first appeared in U.S. theatres by 1961. Other notable adaptations include a pantomime stage production which debuted at the Drury Lane Theatre in 1904; La Cenerentola, an 1817 opera by Gioachino Rossini; Mr. Cinders, a musical which premiered at the Adelphi Theatre in 1929, with music by Vivian Ellis and Richard Myers, and a libretto by Clifford Grey and Greatorex Newman. C harles Perrault (1628-1703) was a French author and is most wellknown for turning folk tales into what we now know as the genre of fairy tales. His best known tales are Le Petit Chaperon rouge (Little Red Riding Hood), Cendrillon (Cinderella), Le Chat Botté (Puss in Boots), La Belle au bois dormant (The Sleeping Beauty), and La Barbe bleue (Bluebeard). Many of his works have since been adapted into plays, musicals, operas, ballets, and more. the evil stepmother T he role of the evil stepmother in fairytales, especially in Cinderella, is an archetype that, when read from a psychoanalytical perspective, stems from what is known as the pubertal child’s “family romance.” This fantasy emerges as a child grows up and her once saintly mother begins to discipline her. With this shift in relationship, the child divides these two maternal characters into two different beings: the good mother and the imposter or false mother. This daydream of the pubertal child gets physically represented in a fairytale with the separation between the good mother (normally dead) and the evil stepmother who is seen as cruel for denying the child something she wants, just as a disciplining mother would. The mother and the stepmother in these tales exhibit exaggerated qualities of good and bad, mirroring the binary in which young children view the world-either it is perfect or it is the worst imaginable. This separation into the good and evil provides the child with an outlet to feel anger towards the false parent without feeling guilt about endangering the true parent, since they are viewed as completely separate entities. These types of fantasies typically appear within children who already exhibit guilt as a part of their personality make-up. This break between the good and the bad within the mother also raises hope in the child for a “happily ever after” ending where the real parent will reappear. Until then however, the child is seen to be in a "Cinderella" existence: one of innocent virtue, living among the ashes of maternal discipline. the fairy godmother T he figure of a fairy godmother has become a staple of the Cinderella story, thanks to the popularity of Perrault’s tale. The fairy godmother acts as a mentor or parent to the protagonist and has been interpreted to be a reincarnation of the dead mother figure or even a projection of the protagonist’s psyche. The fairy godmother, with her magical powers, offers advice and helps our hero, providing her with the love and support missing from her current parental figure. moral (from perrault's cinderella) Moral: Beauty in a woman is a rare treasure that will always be admired. Graciousness, however, is priceless and of even greater value. This is what Cinderella’s godmother gave to her when she taught her to behave like a queen. Young women, in the winning of a heart, graciousness is more important that a beautiful hairdo. It is a true gift of the fairies. Without it nothing is possible; with it, one can do anything. Another moral: Without doubt it is a great advantage to have intelligence, courage, good breeding, and common sense. These, and similar talents come only from heaven, and it is good to have them. However, even these may fail to bring you success, without the blessings of a godfather or a godmother.