Monday, February 6, 2012

The Snow Child - Eowyn Ivey (book trailer)

Heidi over at the SurLaLune Blog posted a lovely review of The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey not long ago and included the book trailer but I wanted to post on it anyway for three reasons:

1) it draws on a Russian snow child tale I've always loved
2) the book trailer is beautifully animated and a joy to watch
3) it's being highly recommended by Ali Shaw, author of The Girl With Glass Feet

Take a look:

Official book blurb:
Alaska, 1920: a brutal place to homestead, and especially tough for recent arrivals Jack and Mabel. Childless, they are drifting apart--he breaking under the weight of the work of the farm; she crumbling from loneliness and despair. In a moment of levity during the season's first snowfall, they build a child out of snow. The next morning the snow child is gone--but they glimpse a young, blonde-haired girl running through the trees. 
This little girl, who calls herself Faina, seems to be a child of the woods. She hunts with a red fox at her side, skims lightly across the snow, and somehow survives alone in the Alaskan wilderness. As Jack and Mabel struggle to understand this child who could have stepped from the pages of a fairy tale, they come to love her as their own daughter. But in this beautiful, violent place things are rarely as they appear, and what they eventually learn about Faina will transform all of them.
The text begins like this:

THE SNOW CHILD EXCERPT

Excerpt from CHAPTER 1

Wolverine River, Alaska, 1920 
Mabel had known there would be silence. That was the point, after all. No infants cooing or wailing. No neighbor children playfully hollering down the lane. No pad of small feet on wooden stairs worn smooth by generations, or clackety-clack of toys along the kitchen floor. All those sounds of her failure and regret would be left behind, and in their place there would be silence.
She had imagined that in the Alaska wilderness silence would be peaceful, like snow falling at night, air filled with promise but no sound, but that was not what she found. Instead, when she swept the plank floor, the broom bristles scritched like some sharp-toothed shrew nibbling at her heart. When she washed the dishes, plates and bowls clattered as if they were breaking to pieces. The only sound not of her making was a sudden “caw, cawww” from outside. Mabel wrung dishwater from a rag and looked out the kitchen window in time to see a raven flapping its way from one leafless birch tree to another. No children chasing each other through autumn leaves, calling each other’s names. Not even a solitary child on a swing. 
                                                                                    ***** 
Norwegian cover
Italian cover
You can continue reading the excerpt HERE, which, if I wasn't sold on this book before, would have sealed the deal. It's just beautiful.
The images posted are variations on the cover, of which I'm glad there are so many (Heidi already posted some of the others). This is one tale I'm, again, mystified by the lack of illustrators tackling the subject. The visuals and the emotions in the story are so poignant. It's almost begging to be given form! (Kind of like the snow child herself.)
Ms. Ivey's website is HERE and you can now purchase the book HERE (it was released February 1st).

Relatedly, there's a Welsh theatrical production of a version of The Snow Child, which is where I found the above image. You can read more information and see more production images HERE.
EXTREMELY LATE UPDATE!
The designs were created by artist/illustrator Fiona Woodcock and the trailer was animated by Verdant Films - something which seemed difficult to pin down when this book was getting so much attention. Such beautiful work needs to be acknowledged! Thankfully, book trailers are now eligible for Moby Awards so hopefully a) people will be more aware of those artists behind the scenes who are doing beautiful work to promote writers b) more effort will go into the quality of book trailers in general. Congratulations to Fiona Woodcock & Verdant Films! This is beautiful and unforgettable work.

Advice For Young Girls From A Cartoon Princess



We're in that time of the pendulum swinging from one extreme to the other. For years fairy tales in popular culture have been mostly on the saccharine side. Now, we're being inundated by the opposite, in which every tale has a sordid and gruesome side and fairy tales are quickly being "rediscovered" as dark, dark, DARK.


Personally I've always favored a little darkness in my stories and fairy tales. I'm one of those girls who will happily watch thrillers, doesn't tolerate "soap", loves Halloween above all other holidays and for whom Buffy is a hero.


BUT, as fantastic and wonderful as it is to see incarnations of fairy tales springing up everywhere, it's already clear that the entertainment machine has broken things down to grind out a formula: ie. take known fairy tale, add angst/violence/darkness, use PG+ visuals and make sure the happy ending at least includes blood smears - rather than consider the original tales and find new ways (or old ways) to tell them. While I've always preferred the girls in my stories to have some gumption (and many fairy tale women do, even if it's subtle) they didn't all need to be wearing leather and able to wield a sword (though that is awesome). Unless some of the fairy tale treatments in production show a lighter side people can turn to for balance (thank goodness for Mirror Mirror, as campy as it appears it will be) it won't be long before people start demanding their happily ever afters back.
Goth Snow White Laptop Decal - is this where we're headed before we go back to Glitter Land?
Before you nod your head too vigorously in agreement, I wanted to remind you of the extreme we've come from, if for no other reason than to say we would best be served by something in between. (I don't mean in each film or series, I mean in the overall offerings available, after all, every one likes something a little different, and I believe there is an important and valid place for Disney offerings, as long as this isn't the sum total representation of our fairy tales).



These videos below have been around for a little while and are based on the Disney versions of the princesses so you probably already have an idea of where this might be going, especially with a title like: Advice For Young Girls From A Cartoon Princess.

Um, I'll just let you watch...

First, advice from Belle:
Then Ariel:
And finally Snow White:
You know what? After seeing these again, I'm ready to go and watch all the dark fairy tale versions available right now as long as it doesn't devolve into true horror. That's something I will never choose to watch.

On Swans, "Snow White" and OUAT

Now that Once Upon A Time is headed to the UK, articles outside the US are starting to pop up to promote the series and explain the premise of the show for newbies. While there isn't much I haven't read before I though I'd post excerpts of a couple of things that caught my eye agin yesterday.
The first talks about swans in fairy tales and Emma's name, of which her surname is, very deliberately, "Swan".

From stuff.co.nz (New Zealand) February 6, 2012 (remember they're a day ahead of US folk):

Every detail of the plot has been carefully thought out, down to Emma's surname – which producers are quick to point out is no connection to Twilight's Bella Swan. 
"I didn't know that that was the last name of the woman in Twilight until two weeks ago," says executive-producer Edward Kitsis. 
Character Emma Swan in a key scene from the OUAT pilot
 "If we knew, I don't know if we would have named her Swan! But we loved the idea of what a swan is to fairy tales." 
"They're very meaningful creatures and especially with how they're establishing Emma in the story – she's the link between fairytale and reality," Morrison says. "Often in literature and in religious references, swans are the unity between divinity and humanity. So it seemed a great symbolic fit for her to have that name, not even realising that she might be the link."

Photographer & subject unknown. Source
I'm not going to add anything on the fascinating subject of swans in myth and fairy tale, as it's a thesis-worthy subject (and I don't have the room or the time!). Instead I'll focus on the Once-specific use to say that apart from the link Emma is supposed to be, I wonder what else the use of Swan might imply in her name? Although Emma is no ugly duck, she certainly fits the Andersen story in being misplaced from birth, being unable to find her home, being bullied about by various creatures and (we assume) eventually finding where she belongs. I guess we'll just have to wait and see...

(There's a nice detailed character bio of Emma Swan HERE with facts known and important story moments along with a nice family tree chart.)

The second thing is about why this premise (fairy tale characters losing - and trying to find - their "happily ever afters" in the real world) and why now, and I'm going to highlight the sentence that caught my eye the most here:
Magic and mythology aside, Kitsis says ultimately he hopes the show will convey an underlying message of hope in today's often-dark times. 
"I think we can all agree that right now, everyone's scared shitless at what's going on in the world. 
"We wanted to write about hope because it's the one thing that's really missing right now and that's why we're seeing so many fairytales and Snow White movies – there's a reason Snow White originally came out during The Depression. (Emphasis mine.)

"People like fairytales for the same reason they buy lottery tickets – so you can tell your boss to go to hell and retire to an apartment in Paris. 
"That's what a fairytale is; one day you're doing laundry for your evil stepsisters and the next your fairy godmother says, `Go to the ball,' and your happy ending comes. Our goal is for one hour a week to get people to sit back and be transported into a place that leaves them a little more hopeful about life than it was an hour before."
Snow White With Apple by Regina Alphonso 
For some reason I never before thought to link the popularity and success of Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs* in being released in The Depression, now 75 years ago, with the current fairy tale zeitgeist/demand happening in the all-too-present depression! 

(OK, for all those who are saying "Well, duh!" you can all stop rolling your eyes now.) 

More than Cinderella, which is a story capitalist America has loved and revered as "their fairy tale" for a few generations now, there is something about the Snow White story which speaks of hope in dark times. No matter if you think of the Disney version or the Grimm Brother's Little Snow White, something about being able to survive all life throws at you - even death - is very appealing.

*For all things Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Filmic Light: Snow White Sanctum is THE blog to go read. It's huge, extensive, well researched and has the best collection of Snow White facts, behind-the-scenes and development images as well as anything merchandise related. You name it, it's there!
**Swan fairy tale inspired image at head found HERE.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

"Loveless Zoritsa" (CRNA ZORICA) A Dark Serbian Fairy Tale


All I've seen is the trailer and a few photos and my curiosity is well and truly piqued. The cinematography and directing style reminded me instantly of (the film version of) Like Water For Chocolate, which I still love, (though that is more comic and romantic), the themes brought the fairy tale ballet Giselle to mind (though the girl in this story didn't die) and the storytelling definitely has a fairy tale quality to it. It's being billed as a black comedy or a darkly comic fairy tale and I can't wait to see it. I only wish the poster was a little less "Steven King" and a little more like the images shown below.
Here's the synopsis:
Zoritsa is a village girl who bears an extraordinary curse: Since her first love got mysteriously drawn in the river, men around her die in a strange way. The raged villagers name her "the kiss of death". The case is in the hands of Mane, the stubborn, young, newcomer cop from Belgrade, temporarily working in the "haunted village". Mane doesn't believe in such "mumbo-jumbo" stories. Soon he will have to face the heavily armed villagers, but also to answer the crucial question: Is Zoritsa a serial killer or just a girl who yearns for love?
Here are some more photos from the film (they look even better and stylistically moody at full size):







And here's the beautiful trailer (not traditionally beautiful in the fairy tale sense but you'll see what I mean), complete with English subtitles.
I love the way it begins:
In our village, when "a shoe falls from the sky"
... people say "misfortune comes barefoot."

Despite that the trailer seems to have told us the whole story, including the resolution (although from the few reviews available we are promised there's more to it than this), I still want to see it. This looks like a satisfying movie, both for the storytelling and for the visuals (I don't mean "pretty" but beautifully set-up scenes and images that will stay with you in the best way. I'm guessing "darkly comic" also means a happy ending with a twist. Hopefully it's a good one.

Loveless Zoritsa was scheduled to open in Serb cinemas last month (January 2012) though IMDB says March 2012 for Serbia. I can't find release dates for the US or other English speaking countries so we'll just have to keep our eyes peeled for mention of it in months to come.
Sources for images and synopsis HERE and HERE.

"Once Upon A Time": Chapter 1 on DVD

Immerse yourself in the mystery of Storybrooke—a sleepy little town where every fairy-tale character you’ve ever known is frozen in time and trapped between two worlds, all victims of an evil curse. Discover the first five thrilling episodes of ABC’s new hit series that has captivated audiences and critics alike with its unforgettable characters and its tangled web of romance, action and enchantment.
Chapter 1 of Once Upon A Time (which is apparently episodes 1 through 5) are being released on DVD (only - no Bluray), exclusively through Target on Tuesday, February 14.

The episodes titles included are:
1. Pilot
2. The Thing You Love Most
3. Snow Falls
4. The Price of Gold
5. That Still Small Voice
This is two episodes off the end-of-year/mid-season finale.

As far as I can tell there is no bonus content included at all but there is a "$5 off" coupon to help you get the complete first season release at a reduced price (on both Bluray and DVD) when it's released in Fall of 2012.

You can pre-order HERE for $9.99 (normally $12.99) - with shipping of course.

"Once Upon A Time" Fan Podcast

Once Upon A Time fans everywhere are bemoaning the fact there's no new episode showing this evening (thanks to Superbowl Sunday) but I have a suggestion for how you can have a Once Upon A Time-alicious evening anyway:


While they're not doing a live show during the Superbowl (some fairy tale fans are sports fan too) Episode 008 - Live Show, Even More Mysterious Stranger, New Deputies and More just went live today. 
Note: If you're up-to-date on the Once episodes you can jump right in with the most current podcast. If not, then go back and find an episode that you really liked and start there. You can download the episodes, including via iTunes and take them with you (eg in the car) or listen to them right in the website by simply clicking play.
There is a ton to listen to and explore once you're done there too. These shows aren't ten minute teasers but spend a solid hour, sometimes 90 minutes, discussing everything Once and they don't just leave you without anything to explore if your speakers have gone on the fritz. 


While I've seen a few podcasts stutter into being then fizzle out since the beginning of the show, this one, and its home website, has gone from strength to strength, showing no signs of slowing down. They provide new content and/or food for thought daily via their blog (with lots of fantastic visuals, like these two - left and right - shown for comparison), Twitter feed, Facebook page and, of course, when new podcast episodes are available to listen to. It's also more encompassing and up-to-date than anything fan-related/driven on the Once Upon A Time website.

The podcast is run by OUAT enthusiasts Jeff and Colleen Roney who discuss and review episodes, issues of story, character, show continuity, details and clues hidden in the background (like exposing Sheriff Graham's last name in the image on the right) as well as theories of who-might-be-whom or where the story is really going - and that's just the beginning. They have a caller hotline in which fans and listeners can ask questions or offer their own observations and theories too. These are played back and answered and discussed by the couple which is always great to hear. They've also ventured into the "live show" zone recently too - which is always a lot of fun (realtime interaction with OAUT fans = win!).

Here's the bonus for fairy tale people: Colleen is not a fairy tale newbie. She is a self-proclaimed lover of fairy tales and both she and Jeff are interested in story, mythic impact and archetypes so are able to intelligently (and spontaneously) discuss these aspects. More importantly, they have a lot of fun doing so so there's no dry conversation that might lose straight-up OAUT fans whose only real fairy tale connection is this TV series. We are lucky to have her and her technically savvy (and smart-to-be-married-to-her husband ;) on our team!

From the original page (they quickly moved to a bigger Wordpress site):

This Once Upon a Time podcast is a fan podcast, and is not an official ABC podcast, nor are we affiliated with ABC TV in any way. 
The podcast is hosted by Jeff and Colleen Roney, a married couple from Orange County, CA. Jeff is a fan of Lost, Star Wars and fiction writing. Colleen is a fan of Lost, all things Disney and Fairy Tales. Together they bring a fresh view of ABC’s hit show starring Ginnifer Goodwin, Jennifer Morrison, Lana Parrilla and others. 
The show will offer thoughts, reviews and in-depth analysis of Once Upon a Time, as well as fun. We hope you enjoy the show, but what makes this show better is input from you.

A little bit of extra-cool the site has recently incorporated is the Storybrooke business page (which in real life is the town of Steveston, in Vancouver) using Google maps and laying out references of locations used for key moments in the show. If you're a OAUT fan it's a must-see and can help support the people and counterpart businesses of Steveston (who've been invaded by lost fairy tale people and have to deal with other inconveniences of being home to a popular TV production!). Click HERE to see the locations and stores (plus all the local information) and make sure you click on the images. It's really quite fascinating and makes me wonder what OAUT might have used if they took over my area.

Happy listening and have a great (Superbowl) Sunday!

Saturday, February 4, 2012

CW's "Beauty and the Beast" Remake Links the Beast's Origins to 9/11

I haven't posted on either Beauty and the Beast TV series development yet and don't have time to comment on them right now (apart from telling you I have a lot of anticipation and am trying to think positive in seeing how these develop), so I'll send you straight to the details:

From io9.com:
Last week, we learned that there were currently two Beauty and The Beast TV pilots in development. One at ABC, which focuses on the fantasyland aspect of the fairy tale. And the second at CW, which was supposedly much more similar to the 1980s series, starring Linda Hamilton and Ron Perlman.

From MovieHole.net:

Now before we get into The CW’s reboot, here’s the plot of the original 1987 series’s pilot :
Wealthy socialite Catherine Chandler works for her father’s firm as a corporate attorney in NYC.  Leaving a party unescorted, she is mistaken for someone else.  She is shoved into a van where her face is slashed as a warning to keep her mouth shut.  Dumped in Central Park she is found by Vincent, a man-beast, who takes her to his home in the forgotten tunnels beneath the city streets.  During her 10 days of recovery, Vincent discovers that he has developed an empathic bond with her.  He returns her to the world above where Catherine immediately changes her life.  She repairs the damage to her face, takes self-defense classes and quits her father’s firm to work as an investigator at the DA’s office.  Eight months later she is looking into her own assault. Nearing the end of the investigation, she is again threatened and attacked.  Vincent, feeling her fear through the bond, arrives just in time to save her.  They realize that they are now a part of each other but each must return to their own worlds.(Source : ClassicAlliance.Net)
Here’s what you need to know about “Beauty & The Beast” 2012 : 
A. How do Catherine and Vincent meet? 
Well, they first meet when she’s younger. When Catherine’s mother was killed in a car-jacking (or whatever it was –  Catherine’s never been convinced it was a simple car-jacking) Vincent was the one who snatched the young girl and saved her from the same fate. As the newspapers tell us, Catherine claimed ‘the beast’ saved her but nobody has laid eyes on him since. 
Years later, they’ll meet again under different circumstances. Catherine is now a feisty, slightly troubled (She can’t keep a relationship; struggles with her mother’s passing) New York City cop who comes across Vincent, the beast, at an old abandoned chemical warehouse.She’s there to speak to a man named TJ, whose car was spotted at a crime scene nights before — a young woman was poisoned. Dead. T.J isn’t there, but instead, she speaks to his ‘roomie’… who remains shrouded in shadows for the most part.  
Catherine is alarmed to discover her ‘Beast’ – the one that saved her as a youngster -is the one behind the shadow. She is taken back by Vincent – once he emerges from the shadows – but despite his features, trusts him when he declares he and his friend did not hurt the girl, but only tried to help her (just as he had done numerous other times; Vincent’s become sort-of like a local ‘Batman’ to the people). At his request, Catherine promises not to let anyone know his whereabouts, let alone that he’s alive. 
B. What’s Vincent’s story? 
Vincent worked as a doctor at the New York University hospital – and was working On September 11, 2001 when the towers came down. 
Long story short, a wounded Vincent ends up in a medical clinic where he’s injected with a DNA-changing drug. The drug turns him into an unstoppable soldier type that is used in Afghanistan. Think ‘Captain America’ or a ‘Universal Soldier’. Unfortunately, the strength and stamina comes with a price…it also changes Vincent’s look — in particular, hair sprouts hair everywhere. 
When he returned from Afghanistan, looking like he is, he hid himself away- – with the help of T.J.
There's a lot more information on the 2012 series version at MovieHole too. Just click HERE to read all the details. 
And I agree with MH's "Caffeinated" Clint. With these kinds of details added to the original premise, this TV series is going to be made or broken on two things: a) the actor choices and b) the writing - as in, it better be really, really good. If it is, optimists are saying, this revamped series may just give CW it's new Buffy.

Theater: The Fairytale Lives of Russian Girls (or ДeByшκИ)

Moscow seems like a fairytale to twenty year old Annie, an American in search of her roots. But when the lines between Russian fairytales and Annie’s reality start to blur - and then vanish – things get seriously dicey.  
The Fairytale Lives of Russian Girls is unlike anything you have ever seen. On our stage, or any others. It's strange. But in the best possible way.
One of the first things you should know about this play (other than the use of fairy tales) is that the playwright, Meg Miroshnik is the winner of the 2010 Alliance/Kendeda National Graduate Playwriting Competition (possibly the best fast track to a professional career a playwright can take) and was just announced as one of 10 finalists of the prestigious 2011-2012 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize -  an award that honors a new English-language play by a female playwright - the winner of which will be announced on February 28th. Basically, you know it's going to be good, even by professional critique standards.


Here's a promo video:



I first found out about this play through this article HERE and, as it caught my imagination so well, I thought I'd give you a couple of larger excerpts than usual in the hopes it would do the same for you (emphasis in bold is mine):

The best way to learn a language is through immersion. And you could make the argument that the best way to explore a nation’s artistic roots is to study its folk tales. Should the folk tales be read in their native language, all the better. 
So for seven years, aspiring playwright Meg Miroshnik went to Moscow to work as a writer and learn Russian. She spent afternoons hunkered down in the children’s section of a Moscow bookstore, trying to decipher rudimentary Russian storybooks. She read tales of the evil witch Baba Yaga, and yarns about the little girl Masha and the dangerous bear. 
Looking back, Miroshnik is not sure how much those narratives helped her learn to speak Russian. But the stories of treacherous witches and menacing bears stoked Miroshnik’s imagination and fueled her dark sense of humor. 
...On its face, the premise of the play is simple: A young woman who was born in Russia but raised in the United States moves back to connect with her roots. She takes a room in an apartment building, and the woman she boards with carries a striking resemblance to Baba Yaga. And that is where the play becomes an experience in magical realism. As the young woman meets other residents, their lives have much in common with characters in Russian fairy tales. 
But the stories Miroshnik weaves are far from sweet. One woman is the captive of an overbearing, cruel boyfriend (the bear from Masha?). Another is a prostitute whose nature suggests fairy godmother. There are magical potatoes that Miroshnik describes as “low-tech theater magic,” and there are a few moments that owe a debt to horror movies, she said. 
“The metaphors are side by side with the more fantastical elements of the play,” said Miroshnik, who is originally from Minneapolis. “It’s a very dark play, but it’s also funny. None of the characters are victims.” 
As much as this play is rooted in fantasy, it owes a great debt to the women of modern Russia, who have been swept aside and pushed forward by the upheaval there. 
...Miroshnik spent as much time reading children’s books in Moscow as she did people watching. She was particularly drawn to the plight of its women and the contrast of their circumstances. 
“You would see these female pensioners begging on the street because there was no room for them in the new Russia,” Miroshnik said. 
Stalking down the same street would be the new, moneyed women of Moscow, which became one of the lasting images of the city for Miroshnik. 
“They were the brightly feathered birds of that city, out wearing stilettos in six inches of snow,” Miroshnik said. 
This young playwright has envisioned an enchanted world where all these women pull from their past to create a new folk tale of modern Russia.

1st release cover
Czech cover
 You can read the whole article (recommended) HERE.




While I have no doubt it's completely original and very different, I can't help being reminded of one of my favorite books by Ekaterina Sedia, The Secret History of Moscow. This is one of those fairy tale books I think would make an amazing film, if handled correctly and by the right combination of people. From all I've seen and read, Ms. Miroshnik's Russian Girls seems to have that same potential, even with the similar subject matter.


In an interview with Encore Atlanta (HERE) Ms. Miroshnik was asked some questions I thought fairy tale readers would find interesting:


What was the inspiration behind The Fairytale Lives of Russian Girls?It came from the opportunity I got to go to Moscow, study Russian and work as a freelance writer. I was struck by how quickly everything was changing there. The life expectancy for Russian men was 57 years, so there were many more women. I saw these iconic images — teenage girls standing in the snow and old women with headscarves at the market — and I was interested in colliding this world of women with both the present and past. I hit upon the idea of trapping them in the predicaments of old Russian folk tales. 
How does that relate to Annie, the show’s central character?
There was a whole generation of people who left the Soviet Union as children who came back to seek opportunities in Russia as the market was taking off. Annie’s a realistic, optimistic American who’s in this crazy situation — living with this woman who may be a girl-eating witch, living across the hall from a girl who claims her boyfriend is turning into a bear. She can be the audience’s skeptical way into this world.
You can read the whole interview HERE.

I recommend reading this article too. Living a fairytale: an American girl’s adventures in Moscow quotes a lot more from Ms. Miroshnik on her experience of living in Moscow, how it translated into writing with fairy tales and the resultant play.


In both the Encore Atlanta interview (linked above) and a video interview shown below Ms. Miroshnik talks passionately about the role of fairy tales, not just regarding her play but in life: 
"I think thematically, the question I'm interested in is: What role can fairy tales play in adult life?"




In researching for this post I found a very interesting and pertinent article from June last year, Putting Fairy Tales and Fashion in Play, which dovetails well with the ideas and characters (and use of fashion too) in this play. 




It talks about fashion model Natalia Vodianova's life - both in the difficulties and successes. While the direct fairy tale references in the article are below, it's her personal story in coming from a harsh upbringing and what she's done with it that parallels her life with many fairy tale heroines:
Life has been bittersweet... Yet Ms. Vodianova, with a steely character behind the sweet face and child-like body, still believes in Russian fairy tales and fables, with their complex dragons and firebirds. 

To mirror that magical reality, the model asked 40 designers to each create a dress for the White Fairy Tale Love Ball, a Russian-inspired fund-raiser that will take place near Paris during the July haute couture season at the Wideville chateau of Valentino and his partner, Giancarlo Giammetti. 

 
Forty one-of-a-kind dresses, all inspired by fairy tales, will be auctioned for the charity by Christie’s and a limited edition book will show Ms. Vodianova in the dresses, photographed by Paolo Roversi. 

“Being still a Russian little girl inside, I wanted to create something around my love of fairy tales,” said Ms. Vodianova, who called on her fashion choreographer friend Alex de Betak to design a winter’s tale set.

The article focuses a lot on her life, the difficulties and tragedies she's overcome and what she's doing to change that for children in her homeland. Interestingly, because of her ability to get influential people to help, she's now seen as a sort of modern Robin Hood with her efforts to help those in need, especially through her foundation Naked Heart

You can read the whole article HERE and see more of the dresses from a special photoshoot for the 2011 Fundraiser Ball HERE and HERE. 

(Gosh it was hard to choose which ones to post! Especially knowing they're each inspired by a Russian fairy tale. I wish I knew which ones.) 


In the mood to read some Russian fairy tales now? HERE is a good place to start.


The Fairytale Lives of Russian Girls (or ДeByшκИ) is playing now through February 26th at Alliance Theater at the Woodruff in Atlanta, GA. You can find ticket and showtime information HERE.

Twyla Tharp's "The Princess and the Goblin"


Twyla Tharp! (Fangirl squee!)

Ahem.

Anyone who has ever followed ballet and dance will be more than aware of legendary American choreographer Twyla Tharp. There's a good chance, even if you're not a dance fanatic, that you've seen some of her work in various movies and musicals [Hair (1978), Ragtime (1980), Amadeus (1984), White Nights (1985), Movin' Out (2002), Come Fly With Me (2010)] as well.

Still working hard at 70, Ms. Tharp spent last Summer choreographing and rehearsing her new full length fairy tale based ballet, The Princess and the Goblin (based on George MacDonald's fairy tale of the same name) with Atlanta Ballet. It's the first time in her fifty-year-long career that Ms. Tharp will have used children in a production.

Twyla Tharp (age 66) photographed by Annie Leibovitz


Commissioned by the ballet in conjunction with Canada’s Royal Winnipeg Ballet, the work is based on George MacDonald’s late 19th-century children’s tale of the same name.
“[MacDonald] came to my attention through several sources about 20 years ago because I was looking for a narrative that would apply to children,” Tharp, a New York resident, said in a statement. “This ballet will in fact be the story of a girl’s coming of age. It’s a traditional Romantic-era tale, but it’s always a male who comes of age, from Goethe on. I would say that when it was first suggested, that this might be a ballet I had to think very hard about it. Although it was written 200 years ago, there are elements in it that are timeless and that are very relevant.” (Source)

Here's a synopsis from Atlanta Ballet Blog:

The Princess and the Goblin by PJ Lynch 


Arrogant King Papa has let his vanity get the best of him.  As he and his courtiers increasingly absorb themselves with frivolous parties and protocols, they remain oblivious to the disturbing fact that their own children have gone missing.  Unable to make King Papa realize his arrogance and ignorance, young Princess Irene decides to take action. 
Together with her Great Grandmother, her best friend Curdie, and a little bit of faith, Irene ventures deep into the underworld – the Goblin kingdom – to rescue the forgotten children.  Proving that faith and goodness can triumph over evil and tyranny, Irene frees the children and teaches the adults a valuable lesson about humility and forgiveness.

You can read a little more about the creation of the ballet and what it was like for the dancers to work with Ms. Tharp HERE and see some rehearsal photos HERE. (No production photos as yet but I'm very curious to see what it will look like!)

I also recommend watching this lovely short video on Ms. Tharp and her creation of the ballet below:



The family friendly ballet makes it's world premiere next week on February 10 at The Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre, Atlanta GA. Ticket information is HERE.