“Attention … fairy tale …
things …” – Shrek (2001).
Fairy Tales are often our
first introduction to literature, even if no one ever reads us any. There are
very few ‘cartoon universes’ that do not have their version of Red Riding
Hood, or Cinderella, or Hansel and Gretel, or Goldilocks
and the Three Bears (which, remember, is a ‘literary fairy tale’, written by
Robert Southey, the Poet Laureate of England in the early 19th
Century).
There are some blurry lines
between ‘Fairy Tales’ and ‘Folk Tales’, and anthologies are not always too
picky about the classification. Even Grimm’s Fairy Tales (or Household
Tales, as they were originally known) verged on the literary fairy tale,
considering how much the Brothers Grimm revised them for publication. The
stories of Hans Christian Anderson are so old they’ve become almost traditional
and are often coupled with those of the Grimms. People are sometimes very
careless, lumping in Nursery Rhymes, Mythology, Legends, Folk Tales, and
children’s books like Alice in Wonderland or The Wizard of Oz
under the title of Fairy Tales.
Though editors have often ‘bowdlerized’
the older tales, taking out violent or scary elements that they feel are too
intense for modern children, there is also a trend growing not only to rewrite
the tales but to almost stand them on their heads. Villains are portrayed as
not so bad (they have their reasons), and the heroes as not so good, if not
downright … villainous. These seem to be aimed at an older audience, more used
to the moral ambiguities of life, or even wishing to justify their own
questionable actions. While being first and primarily entertaining adventures, fairy tales are deposits of folk wisdom, training wheels for action and morality. If
an old witch is going to eat you and your brother for supper, it might be
justifiable to push her into the oven. Being nice to unfortunate strangers,
even at your own cost, might bring unexpected benefits in the future. The meek
and lowly and loyal will be rewarded if they hang onto their virtue.
I was started on this train
of thought about fairy tales when an episode of Jim Henson’s The Storyteller
came up in my Youtube feed, and that also reminded me of Shelley Duvall’s Faerie
Tale Theatre. Here are links to the first episode of each series,
which will lead to complete playlists for both.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gDCOoJSeEc4&list=PLanMgRaDfhFaSDQm4oeOPuwMyHdJiwGAx The Storyteller
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0s7NQs1j9c4&list=PL0iJzH8-bQLlEu361pA_U158R_gEOPSig Faerie Tale Theatre






















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