Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Creepy Fairy Godmothers

I looked at the illustrations of Cinderella on the Sur La Lune website. After looking at many of the different drawings done to accompany Cinderella I noticed that there were many different depictions of the fairy godmother. Some of the illustrations showed the godmother to be rather evil looking, almost as if she appeared as a witch. But we all know that the fairy godmother is good and actually helps Cinderella so I thought it was interesting to portray her in this dark, ominous way. For example in Arthur Rackman’s drawing the godmother appears darkly cloaked and boney, almost as one would picture the witch in Hansel and Gretel to look like. She does not appear jolly and bright like the Disney fairy godmother. There is another illustration done by Paul Woodroffe which shows the fairy godmother with a black witch’s hat on. She is wearing a red cloak and a tight black dress. Her face is very pale and almost skeletal looking and she hovers creepily over Cinderella. She really does appear more like an evil sorcerer than a gift bearing godmother. I wondered why the illustrators chose to draw the godmother in this way. If I were a child reading these stories and viewing these pictures I would immediately associate the pictures of the godmothers as evil due to the way the illustrators drew them. Perhaps these artists were hinting at the moral that Perrault highlights at the end of his story, that beauty isn’t everything, but rather graciousness and a good heart. Although these fairy godmothers appear wicked, they have inner goodness and grant dear Cinderella’s wishes.

2 comments:

  1. It is interesting to read how the fairy godmothers are portrayed. I agree with you that I have always pictured fairy godmothers as the friendly, gift bearing type. However, while the Irish version I read does not really go into detail, the cloak of darkness the fairy godmother uses sounds a lot like witchcraft. Maybe these artists are picking up on other themes or versions of the tale that have worked their way out of contemporary versions. It would be interesting to see these pictures chronologically to map the changes over time.

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  2. You make a good point about the witchcraft -- was this not around the time that widowed/single older women were being convicted of practicing witchcraft (ie: The Juniper Tree)? I think it would be interesting to see where these illustrator's were living at the time and what was going on in the realm of witch trials.

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