Alice is tired of logic and lessons and the ordinary world. She wants a world of her very own: a world of nonsense, if you please, where everything will be what it isn't, and "contrariwise," when it isn't, will be what it is. That's why she's so very eager to follow the White Rabbit, despite some sound advice to herself about not going where one hasn't been invited. Once she's tumbled in it's too late to turn back, and Alice finds Wonderland not only as nonsensical and fantastical as she could have hoped, but frustrating and perplexing as well. "It's all so confusing!" she cries after mad tea parties and caterpillars and disappearing cats. But it's all very well to complain now that she's gotten what she wanted. Perhaps she should have followed her own "very good advice" and stayed where she was, and left Wonderland to her dreams.The Alice of Lewis Carroll's stories was a real little girl: 12-year-old Alice Liddell, daughter of a colleague. Carroll originally told the story to Alice herself while on an outing on July 4, 1882, a day that is considered as important to the history of English literature as that date is to American history.Kathryn Beaumont, the young actress who voiced and modeled for Alice (as well as Wendy in "Peter Pan" wink , spent the majority of two years at the Disney Studios, even going to school on the lot, so she could be on-call for the duration of production.
shermolinaopo1 · Wed Apr 22, 2009 @ 11:34pm · 0 Comments |