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Friday, July 28, 2023

The Jewish Bones of Tim Burton's 'The Corpse Bride'

The Corpse Bride/ Credit: Warner Bros.Entertainment Inc.
Did you know that Tim Burton's, stop-motion animated movie "The Corpse Bride" has Jewish bones?

The Finger - A Russian-Jewish Folktale
It's based on the Russian-Jewish folktale "The Finger" from the “Shivhei ha-Ari” ("Praises of the Ari", written in the 17th century), which collected tales about the alleged supernatural and magical feats of the (real-life) Rabbi Luria, 'proving' his mastery. 
The stories are hagiographic legends — tales about a master that show his great powers. In the corpse-bride narrative, Rabbi Luria confronts the cadaver, who accepts his authority. (Jewish Journal)
Howard Schwartz included his own retelling of this tale in his book Lilith's Cave, and is the first printed version to have a corpse bride instead of a demon who traps the foolish bridegroom.
Lilith's Cave: Jewish Tales of the Supernatural
selected & retold by Howard Schwartz


Here's an evocative excerpt from a retelling by ProjectShalom2:
... as his friends looked on in amusement, Reuven took off his ring and slipped it on that finger, pronouncing as he did the words Harai at m’kudeshes li-“You are betrothed to me”-three times, as the law requires. But no sooner did he finish speaking than the finger began to twitch, much to the horror of the young men, who jumped back at the sight.

Suddenly the whole hand reached out from the earth, twitching and grasping. And as they stared at it in horror, frozen in place, the ground began to rumble, as if the earth were about to open. Suddenly the body of a woman, wearing a tattered shroud, rose out of the earth, her dead eyes staring directly into those of Reuven, her arms open as she cried out, “My husband!” in a terrible and terrifying voice. 

Image via ProjectShalom2 - artist unknown

In this tale, the bridegroom gets lucky as a Rabbi rules the marriage to be invalid. The animated corpse and almost-bride emits one last shriek collapsing into bone dust for good.
The Corpse Bride/ Credit: Warner Bros.Entertainment Inc.
Tim Burton's The Corpse Bride
It was excerpts of this tale, told to Tim Burton by the late executive producer Joe Ranft (also screenwriter, animator, director, storyboard artist, and voice actor) that had Burton decide he wanted to make a family-friendly, fairy tale fantasy. Rather than wallow in the darkness of the tale -which this one has plenty of! - Burton chose to take a gothic-romantic approach and combine it with some enchanting Halloween-like fun, all via the medium of stop-motion animation, which is very well suited to animating the dead. 

The effect is hauntingly magical (in the best sense of the word 'haunt') and is even more fairy-tale-like than the original folktale, or the fairy tale ballet legend Giselle, (which I will get to shortly).
“Bride” revolves around a shy, bumbling groom, Victor, who is practicing the wedding ceremony when he impulsively slides his ring on what he assumes is a stick. The corpse who emerges is not a hideously disintegrating cadaver, but a lovely, if unearthly heroine. “When she gently takes off her veil and we see her for the first time, it becomes a glamour-girl shot,” cinematographer Pete Kozachik said. The cadaver claims her husband, but does not emit bloodcurdling shrieks or insist upon the consummation of the marriage, like her folk-tale counterpart. Her mild flaws include a tendency toward petulance and an understandable proclivity for dropping a limb or having her eyeball pop out. (summary from Jewish Journal)
She does, however, take Victor down to the Land of the Dead, leaving the naturally confused and bereft fiancee behind. Just like the strongly related Jewish folktale (The Demon in the Tree*), which, from production anecdotes, appears to be part of the inspiration (see notes at end of article), it is the "true bride" - Victor's fiancee - that enables the wronged bride^ to release Victor and eventually find her own release, in an unforgettably lovely scene.

There is also a strong emphasis put on words and vows in the film, or The Power of the Word. In Jewish tales, Jewish magic is created with words. (See Further Reading at the end of the article for more on this.) Victor's words in practicing his vows, though stumbling and not said as a promise to the "root" - actually a finger bone - have the power to animated the dead bride, while in "The Finger", the words reciting the groom's vow - despite being uttered in jest - also have the power to bring a corpse to life. It's an unconscious, but important connection with the roots of the story.
Annemarie Heinrich (1912-2005), Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
The Giselle Connection
It's not difficult to see that these themes are reflected in another mediums, specifically ballet. One of the great classics, Giselle is considered to be a "fairy tale ballet". In the ballet, Giselle, a young naive girl, who loves to dance but has a weak heart, falls in love with a man who betrays her - he's a nobleman in disguise and already promised in marriage, an agreement he has no intention of breaking. Giselle, on finding out, goes mad with grief and becomes heartbroken - literally. Her heart gives out and she dies. In the second act, she is raised from her grave by the Wilis, a 'sisterhood' of vengeful supernatural women, still wearing their unused white wedding dresses (and gifted with 'flight' and little fairy wings). These ghost brides (there is a whole TV Trope on this type of ghost) looking very ethereal and chillingly inhuman, aim to take revenge on the men who betrayed them on or before their wedding day, leading them to an early grave of their own. Giselle, rather than take her revenge, resists the spell of the Wilis and protects the man she still loves by shielding him and helping him survive until morning when the Wilis' power fades. Her love also stops her from becoming a "full Wilis" (and, essentially, a demon). In the end, she passes 'over' to her afterlife, rather than joining the ranks of the Wilis. Love conquers death. 

While there has never been any mention (that I can find) to connect The Corpse Bride with Giselle, there are a lot of shared ideas, as is the atmosphere.
The Corpse Bride/ Credit: Warner Bros.Entertainment Inc.
How To Get Out Of Marrying A Demon
You can find a retelling of the Jewish folktale "The Finger" in the book Lilith’s Cave: Jewish Tales of The Supernatural, selected and retold by Howard Schwartz (Oxford University Press, 1988), but it is worth noting here, that Schwartz, has assured scholars he is the first translator and writer to use a bride for the story, rather than a demon. It should also be noted that this book includes a second tale, very much like 'The Finger', titled 'The Demon in the Tree'. (A summary* of this fascinating story is included in the notes below this article.) 

In his text, Schwartz traces the roots of the story back to a Hebrew-biblical commentary about Adam's "insubordinate wife", Lilith, who eventually became a seductive demon. Later variations on this Adam-Lilith tale have the man seeking to escape a marriage (of accident or force) to a demon:
“the forced or accidental marriage of a man to a demon; an attempt to be free of unwanted vows and a decision reached by a rabbinical court,” Schwartz wrote in “Lilith’s Cave.” The unearthly characters “perhaps represent the fear of marriage to gentiles and hybrid offspring,” he said. Like the supernatural fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm... the corpse bride of folk tradition also serves as a cautionary tale, warning about the consequences of bad behavior... (and of being careful to not take vows lightly.) (Jewish Journal)
The Corpse Bride/ Credit: Warner Bros.Entertainment Inc.

A Bloody Connection With History (& Why We Remember This Tale)

But this tale  - "The Demon in the Tree" - also has a bloody connection to history. The point of the tale appears to be, to remember the anti-Semetic pogroms, carried out in the 1880's-1900's, and the brides that were uniquely targeted during these hideous raids.

pogrom is an organized massacre of an ethnic or religious group. In this case, it was Jews who were slaughtered in the thousands, by Russians who followed the Czar, Alexander III. It was said that during this massacre, wedding carriages and wedding parties were specifically targeted and attacked. Why? Their agenda was to murder the bride, so she could not produce any more Jewish children. Truly horrifying.

In this tale, there is also the very real question of how to deal with grief.

Considering the Corpse Bride in the Jewish folktale "The Finger", is in pain due to her life being lost before she was able to live it, here's a reflective summary, that considers the aspect of grief, from Cherie Dawn Carr aka Pixie Lighthorse:
In... The Corpse Bride, a wrongfully murdered woman comes forth from the grave, wearing a tattered gown on a decaying body, wanting the wedding day she never got to have - she died before she got a chance to. The living bridegroom she desires (who stirred her from her slumber in the unmarked resting place by repeating the wedding vows three times and placing the ring on her protruding finger) is spoken for, but she pursues him anyway. This is because unfulfilled dreams and ungrieved pain can be very powerful motivators. In the end, it is the (living) bride who soothes her restless soul. She is the only one who can. She promises to lay her to rest respectably, shows her compassion and empathy for the wedding day she did not get to have, the children she did not get to birth, the partnership she did not get to enjoy. The bride promises to live a full and robust marriage with all that is in her today, and when the corpse feels heard and seen, honored, the spell is released.
The Corpse Bride/ Credit: Warner Bros.Entertainment Inc.
Shroud vs Wedding Dress
There is an English tradition of burying a bride in her wedding dress, if she died very close to the wedding day, and among Ukrainian Orthodox Christians, (which, as we are now well aware are geographically close to Russia, with some overlap between Ukrainian and Russian traditions) young women who died unmarried were, and sometimes still are, also buried in wedding dresses. I am not able to find a similar Jewish custom, especially as traditional Jewish burial rituals are very specific in having everyone be 'equal' at death and must be buried only in a shroud - no special clothing

That this Jewish tradition of equality at death is not represented in Burton's The Corpse Bride, is due to Burton's "artistic license" since the folktale, The Finger, specifically mentions a tattered shroud the almost-bride is wearing as she rises out of the ground. (You can read a detailed note** at the end of the article on Burton's awareness of the cultural origin of this story.)

The image of a corpse in a wedding dress is more easily recognizable as a bride to American and Western audiences than if she wore a culturally correct shroud, and while it probably was not intentional of Burton to actively erase any Jewish connection at the time, it was still his conscious choice to move away from Jewish references. He was, as he said in an interview, trying to make "a universal fairy tale quality", but the result clearly shows a white and Western bias to an idea of a fairy tale, and does indeed result in having an erasing effect.
Tim Burton on The Corpse Bride, from an interview on the press tour

The racial whiteness of the image of a corpse in a wedding dress is further underscored by being placed in a clearly-Victorian setting, and while I understand that this was in order to juxtapose the very gray, living-death-like, stifling world of Victorian control against the ironically free and lively Land of the Dead (which, interesting, Burton specifically mentions he used to reflect cultures which honor the dead, rather than fear of it, such as with the Mexican Day of the Dead festival, though even this design is dominated by Olde World English Pub-type styles, despite the addition of Moroccan motifs!), from a cultural context, this doesn't sit well. In fact, it undermines the very "universal fairy tale quality" Burton says he was aiming for. Burton's idea of "Fairy Tale" appears to be deeply white and Western. My hope is if Burton were creating the film now, he would find a way to better honor this tale's Jewish roots (or someone would insist he did!). While a wedding dress on a corpse is a haunting image, and Burton did a stellar job of making it look "fairy tale" and recognizable, I think he could easily rise to the challenge of depicting a shrouded, Jewish not-quite bride, and not lost an iota of "universal fairy tale quality". It's the cultural blindness of white preference here that unfortunately ages and unsavorily skews this otherwise fabulous - and somewhat feminist - film.

Returning to a Jewish Horror Tale
There is one last connection worth mentioning for anyone looking to really study this and that is the Polish horror movie Demon, released in 2015 (rated R). 

Here is a summary from the New York Times:
“Demon” is based on “Adherence,” by the Polish playwright Piotr Rowicki, but also shares much with “The Dybbuk: Between Two Worlds,” by the Russian ethnographer and revolutionary Shloyme Zaynvl Rapoport (a.k.a. S. An-ski). Set in an Eastern Europe town, “The Dybbuk” tells of a yeshiva student who uses kabbalistic means to win the woman he loves. Instead, he dies, and his spirit enters her body as a dybbuk — the evil soul of a dead person. (“I’ve returned to my beloved, and I’ll never leave her!”) The realms of the dead and the living are inseparable in this story, where wedding parties dance around a “holy grave” to “cheer and comfort” a couple murdered in a pogrom.

Wikipedia describes the plot, and intention, of the movie this way (below), and I'm including it because it's enlightening in its reflection of the themes and, specifically, the erasure of Jewish culture, which I find to be a satisfying return of motif:

Piotr (Itay Tiran), who has been living and working in England for many years, and Zaneta (Agnieszka Zulewska), a Polish lady, are to be married; they had met only over the Internet, but he knew her brother. Piotr speaks Polish awkwardly, remembering more from his ancestors than from personal experience. He moves into a run-down large rural estate previously owned by Zaneta's grandfather.

While digging in the yard with a backhoe right before the wedding, Piotr finds a skeleton, which at first he keeps quiet about. He is increasingly haunted by the vision of a woman in a wedding dress – Hana. During the wedding reception, this vision draws closer and closer to him, and he has apparent seizures. He is eventually possessed by Hana, the woman in the dress. Zaneta's family is well-to-do, and they want to keep his breakdown quiet from the rest of the wedding guests, so they distract their guests with vodka and loud music while locking Piotr in the basement, first with a doctor, then a priest. Finally, the "teacher" (Wlodzimierz Press, who appears to be the only surviving Jewish resident of the town pre-war), realizes that Piotr is speaking Yiddish and that he is possessed by the spirit of Hana, a lovely Jewish girl he knew before the war who suddenly disappeared.

The film is a re-telling of a classic dybbuk story and also an allegory for Polish-Jewish relations before and after the war. It is implied that Zaneta's grandfather may have gotten rich in part by "possessing" this property once its former Jewish residents were gone.
You can read an interesting review discussing, in particular, the themes of societal erasure, on the Roger Ebert website HERE.
The Corpse Bride/ Credit: Warner Bros.Entertainment Inc.

For Contrast, Here's a Jewish Tale of a Corpse Groom
Since I've been discussing imbalances and the importance of cultural context, I thought I would add the bonus of another Jewish folktale called "The Maiden and the Corpse". It has less in common with the 'Grateful Dead' types of tales (ATU505) and more in common with the 'Search for the Lost Husband' tales (ATU 425), as well as a few others in the mix. I am unable to find this tale in any Jewish collection or world tale collections available to me, other than Amy Friedman's Tell Me A Story series, popularized on CD and audiobook. The tale is (supposed to be) on Volume 3 - Women of Wonder. Unfortunately, I do not have either the book or the audio to verify this for myself, at the time of writing this article.

Unlike many other tales of extensive deeds and tasks undertaken while searching for the groom, or contracts involving the dead, there has been no misdeed or mistake made by this girl. She is the good sister who keeps her word and a positive perspective during her trials.

This is how it begins:
Credit: Times Herald-Record
Once upon a time, a poor peasant woman had three daughters. One day the eldest daughter, Raisa, said, "Mother, I'm off to seek my fortune." Her mother baked a cake and cooked a chicken, and handed them to her daughter. "Take half with my blessing," she said, "or the whole with my curse."

Raisa frowned. "The whole is little enough," she said, and off she went. Her mother did not curse her, after all, but she did not give her a blessing either.

Raisa walked until she was hungry, and she sat down to eat. A poor beggar woman came by and asked if she could have a bite or two.

"It's too little even for me," Raisa said, and she ate it all up.

She walked on until she reached an inn where she stopped for the night.

"I'll give you a spade full of gold and a shovel full of silver if you'll watch my son's corpse," said the innkeeper's wife. "He's in the next room."
You can read the tale in full at recordonline.com, HERE.
The Corpse Bride/ Credit: Warner Bros.Entertainment Inc.
Is Tim Burton's The Corpse Bride Worth Seeing Then?
Unequivocally yes! It's a beautiful fairy tale film, and, while imperfect, raises a lot of important questions and has a satisfying ending that, on first viewing, isn't apparent you're going to reach. 

If watched with an awareness of Jewish origins and history, and what has resulted in the subtext due to adapting for a Western audience via a white bias, this has an important place in the history of fairy tale films. Highly recommended.

Further Reading & References:

Notes
*"The Demon in the Tree" summary via Jewitches: 

(A) young boy who places a ring around the finger of a demon, accidentally. He forces it from his mind, hoping his actions will have no consequences. When he grows up and gets married, his first bride is murdered by the demon as she walks past the tree to their home. The second bride meets this same fate. The third bride, however, is too quick and ducks as
Rusalka - Ivan Bilibin/public domain via Wikimedia Commons
the demon attempts to kill her. A very smart woman, the third wife confronts the husband and he confesses to having married the demon in his youth. The wife decides to make peace with the demoness, bringing her plates of jam and leaving them outside of the tree where the demon resides. The demon returns the plate with a gold coin upon it. They live in peace for some time, but when the wife falls pregnant, she knows the demon wife will not be pleased. She decides to meet with the demoness and they come to the understanding that they will share the husband, with the agreement that the demoness will have the husband for one hour at sunset every night, so long as she leaves the wife and her family alone. Seven years after the agreement is struck, the wife goes to replace the plate of jam and finds on it the wedding ring that her husband had given the demon so many years before, indicating the demon had finally gone.

^ The Wronged Bride
When discussing adaptations of folk and fairy tales it's important to note differences between the originating inspiration (that is, the tale variation used as a source for the adaptation), and the retold version. In this case, not only is it important that the source was Jewish and the adaptation intentionally not reflective of that, but the fact that Burton's
The Corpse Bride/ Credit: Warner Bros.Entertainment Inc.
Corpse Bride is a murdered bride where the source female corpse was not murdered but died before she could have the experience of being a bride and wife, is also important. Two aspects (at least) are at work here: one is that Burton took pains to make sure the audience felt sympathy for the monster, which is Emily, a reanimated dead woman, so increased the tragedy of her backstory, and, as a result, wove in a tale of justice for her murderer, and freedom from trauma that continued beyond the grave. Although it seems to make good story sense in trying to humanize what essentially is monstrous, an astute audience should be asking why this Westernized tale needed the woman (Emily) to be murdered to engender sympathy, rather than just the pain of missing out on her dreams of being a wife and a married life. Logic suggests the filmmaker/s believed audiences would have dismissed, possibly even disdained, this sort of pain for a woman. Instead, she had to be murdered and wronged for the audience to equate her desires as important and worthy of consideration. A woman's intense grief at missing out on the life she aimed to have is too easily dismissed. What does that say about our society?
The second aspect is the metaphor of the murdered bride seeking her right to be married and revenge for her betrayal. In Burton's tale, it's clear Victor is struggling with the idea of "with marriage comes death and loss of personal freedom", a common Western male perspective - so common it's joked about in Western pre-wedding rituals. The audience is made to sympathize with Victor's sense of feeling trapped and that any possibilities and dreams for his own life are ending, even more than the tragedy of Emily's murder. Ironically, Victor's fear of the "death of his dreams" is just like the source tale's corpse, and becomes the focus, gaining the audience's sympathy, whereas if Emily had been portrayed as having died more naturally - that is, not murdered - in the circumstance of her dreams being unfulfilled, her rising and insistence on her bride rights per Victor's vow, would seem more akin to her being a Bridezilla than a tragic figure. Again, women's pain, both in unfulfilled dreams and in becoming literal victims, is put secondary to a man's rather than seen as equal and as valid. Even Victoria, whose own situation holds the triple tragedy of her dreams being crushed, a seeming betrayal by Victor, and being pursued as an intended victim of Lord Barkis (a killer a la Bluebeard in the making), does not win the sympathy of audiences until she shows agency and rebelliousness, with no allies and her own murder looming. (Here Atwood's quote 'Men are afraid that women will laugh at them. Women are afraid that men will kill them.', is directly reflective of the discriminatory sympathy at work here.) As in fairy tales across time, however, it is in learning the story of the woman gone before her - the cautionary fairy tale - that aids Victoria at the crucial moment. The murdered bride is avenged and finally dissolves into freedom from her pain and curse.

** On director Tim Burton's awareness of the Jewish origins of the tale. 

For this note I am referencing two books: Tim Burton's Corpse Bride - An Invitation to the Wedding (which is the beautifully assembled official "making of" book for the movie), and Fairy Tale Films - Visions of Ambiguity, edited by Pauline Greenhill and Sidney Eve Matrix, Chapter 10, "Tim Burton and the Idea of Fairy Tales" by Brian Ray
Tim Burton's The Corpse Bride: An Invitation to the Wedding
In the official "making of" book the origin story of this movie is told like this (excerpts are from pages 17-19): 
The genesis was a 19th-century East European folktale told to Burton by his friend Joe Ranft... "Joe gave me the idea around the time of Nightmare," recalls Burton who had been looking for another project to do in stop-motion, "and it was minimal. There were no characters in it from what I recall, except for the Corpse Bride. It was like a little short story. And even though it was only a couple of paragraphs long, it captured my attention...." The tale concerned a young man traveling home in order to wed his fiancee, When his wedding ring winds up on a rotted finger of a murdered girl, who then returns from the grave and insists she is the man's lawfully wedded wife, he's then forced to journey to the underworld to set things right, while his fiancee remains among the living, pining for his return.
[Ed - Are you getting inverted Persephone vibes here? I sure am!]
While the original folktale had been of Russian origin, Burton didn't want to set Corpse Bride in any particular country. "It was very clear to me that I wanted to keep that fairy-tale aspect," he says. "Even though it's got Victorian elements and a largely British cast, I didn't necessarily want to set it in a specific place."
[Ed - Except that adding the double layer of Victorian elements and British voices did precisely that.]
Then there is the additional information from producer Allison Abbate, who it appears came across a little more research, again via Ranft. The tale she's referencing though, is not The Finger, in which the live bride is pretty much terrified and absent, but The Demon in the Tree, in which the live bride has character and agency. On page 21, she writes:
"I found out later that the original fable really stresses Victoria's point of view and the Corpse Bride is more of a monstrous, villainous character... "I didn't know that until Joe Ranft came to visit us and happened to mention it," she continues. We naturally gravitated to fleshing out Victoria's storyline because she gets the guy in the end. She is, in so many ways, the heroine of the piece... not just the "other woman."
Fairy Tale Films: Visions of Ambiguity
edited by Pauline Greenhill
& Sidney Eve Matrix
In Fairy Tale Films - Visions of Ambiguity, (scholarly essays and research), chapter 10's essay by Brian Ray includes a detailed section on Burton's The Corpse Bride. In it he includes this note: "Many sources on the Web and in print... have misattributed the source of Burton's film to a vague nineteenth-century retelling of the original version. Jewish folktale expert Howard Schwartz assured me in an email on May 12, 2008, that his short story, "The Finger," in his collection entitled Lilith's Cave, is the first adaptation of the Venus-ring motif [Ed - accidental marriage to a statue] to make the bride a corpse, rather than a demon. He did so "to make it more a tale of terror"
Furthermore, Schwartz's story is the only version that Burton and Warner Bros. officially acknowledge as inspiration." (p213)

On Joe Ranft's Folktale Knowledge and Possible Text or Oral Sources
Clearly, the key source here is Joe Ranft, a gifted and knowledgable animator, and "story guy", widely loved and respected, who passed away in a tragic car accident in 2005. Many have talked about how knowledgeable he was regarding tales and storytelling, though I have never read anything about his personal studies in literature or folklore, apart from a deep appreciation of Robert Bly's book Iron John: A Book About Men (source: Two Guys Named Joe by John Canemaker), which draws on the fairy tale of Iron John and other tales and myths. A colleague of Ranft's, attempting to learn more about this man after hearing so many amazing anecdotes at his funeral, interviewed Su, Ranft's surviving wife, and asked about his faith. I am including it here in case it becomes apparent that his faith, and interest in other cultures and faiths, shed any light on where he learned the tale he told to Burton. Here are her words: “He was raised a pretty strict Catholic in an Irish-German-Czech-Catholic family,” Su said. “And even though he was not a practicing Catholic when we were married, he never had a harsh word to say about it because it made him who he was.
“He did read the Bible, and there were so many things in there that became part of his moral ethic and his interior compass. He was interested in reincarnation and karma, all the different religions; he didn’t just confine himself to Christianity.
The Corpse Bride/ Credit: Warner Bros.Entertainment Inc.

*********************************************************************

Gypsy Thornton (she/her) is the Guardian of a chicken-legged coffee cup with a mind of its own. A night owl forced to get up with larks, she often describes herself as liminal and is forever trying to do impossible things before breakfast. She can only be seen in her true form after midnight.


Creator & Editor: The Wondering
[a transformation of Once Upon A Blog: Fairy Tale News]
https://medium.com/the-wondering

Wednesday, November 6, 2019

#Folktaleweek Picks of Day 2: "Secret"

IG @laudanumflavour
What is #FolktaleWeek and #FolktaleWeek2019? You can read all about it HERE and see a sampling of the myriad mediums and styles being created in. You can also see a small selection of the MANY posts that appeared yesterday for the prompt of HOME HERE.

Today's prompt is SECRET.

Note: As far as fairy tale and folklore trends for today's prompt we expected lots of Bluebeard (and there were quite a few) but we also noticed lots of Billy Goats Gruff, Rumpelstiltskin, The Crane Wife and, again, lots of selkies.

Again, we chose for different styles, unusual scenes of known tales and most often, lesser-known tales wonderfully done.

Enjoy - artist credits, and any pertinent notes made by them for their work, are below each image.

The following is our favorite creation for today's prompt. The pic immediately below is the doll but then her secret is revealed in an Instagram video so swipe through to see it before scrolling down for the secret image.
IG @madebysmitty
Amazing, right?

Continue on down for a huge variety of folktale SECRETS from Tuesday.

IG @oprunenco
Artist comment: The second day, I was inspired by a Russian fairytale,, Kashey Besmertnyi,,. His Secret is : his death under a tree is chest- in a chest a rabbit - in a rabbit a duck- in a duck an egg-in an egg a needle- in a needle his death!
IG @katyerayda_plasticine

Artist comment: DAY2 ☆SECRET☆ FolktaleWeek - if you believe in magic, one day on a rainbow day in the grass you can find a sleeping elf baby - Good luck for all of you😊☘🌞
IG @feliciaolin
Artist comment: Fadhila's Secret (A Kenyan Folktale) - I searched #secret and #folktale and found a Kenyan folk tale about a girl with good luck finding fruit and a lazy, greedy spider who takes advantage of her kindness. I have been pretty obsessed with the tribal make-up from Beyonce's Lemonade so I used a cross between that make up and some more traditional Kenyan attire.
IG @ellinarium_art
Artist comment: N/A
IG @suzemariepics
Artist comment: Day 2: Secret. This is The Forest Bride:The Little Mouse who was a Princess.🐁👸 A farmer had 3 sons and wanted them to marry, so he told them to each chop a tree and search in the direction of their own fallen tree for a bride. The youngest sons tree pointed into the forest where only animals lived. The youngest son, struck up a friendship with a white mouse, who held a secret, she was an enchanted Princess disguised as a mouse. After each son and prospective bride performed several tasks for the Father, which the mouse excelled at, she was invited to meet him. She decided to go in style, in a little carriage of an empty nutshell, pulled by five black mice. As they neared his ho.e they had to cross a footbridge, as the neared the middle a man was coming towards them, and kicked the coach and mice into the river below. As the young man mourned his mouse, a fancy coach pulled up, and a beautiful princess approached the man, and she explained she had been the mouse. The young man took his bride to be home to meet his father. 🐁🐀🐀🐀🐀🐀👸
IG @spittypt
Artist comment: N/A
IG @nadine_dubois
Artist comment: N/A
IG @taranealarts
Artist comment: Day 2 of #folktaleweek is #Secret. This magic purple cow is Wee Little Havroshechka’s secret helper from the Slavic folktale, which has a few versions but always includes Havroshechka adopted by a mean woman with mean daughters and given ridiculous tasks like making several new dresses out of a small square of linen. She somehow has this magical cow that pities her and says, “jump through my ears and the work will be done.” But sometimes the translation is, “jump in one ear and out the other,” which was much funnier as a kid. Eventually she runs away because the stepmother wants to kill the cow and she finds a cottage with little dwarves and a handsome prince and she wins him over with domestic work. Theoretically the cow gets along ok as well, or one would hope.
IG @bethwoolrich
Artist comment: Folktale Week Day 2 - SECRET The Secret of the Fairies - One day, an ironworker named Matteo decided he must see the fairies...... “Good," she said, "but one thing you must know. I will teach you every secret, and I will make you happy, but you must see me only when I wish you to see me. Never follow me. Promise me that." "I promise," Matteo said.
IG @rufina.blackwell.art
Artist comment: Day 2 of #folktaleweek, prompt ‘Secret’ - I have chosen the fairy tale ‘The Secret’ about a farmer who found two pots of gold 💰💰and as he was afraid people would be after his gold, he decided to test his wife and check if she could keep a secret 🙄I think you already know she did not pass the test ☺️
IG @leila_and_po
Artist comment: Folktale Week Day 2: Secret - Cinderella’s secrets with magical animals and fitting into glass slippers, the list goes on and on. - I went with an older, pre-Disney version of this story. My 16 year old came up with the idea of representing both versions of Cinderella by depicting one in the mirror’s reflection. 
IG @meg.vermaak
Artist comment: DAY 2: SECRET - Today’s folktale illustration is based on a story titled ‘Mrs Chicken and the hungry crocodile’. 🐊 “The night before their eggs are all about to hatch, Chicken secretly trades eggs with crocodile.” Chicken then tries to convince Crocodile that they are related so that he will not eat her. -What a humorous tale! 🐓
IG @marketastengl
Artist comment: day 2 SECRET 🖤 - Inspired by a Japanese folktale called The Flute. - A flute cries and helps a father to find out that his daughter was killed by her stepmother. - Did you know that only dead and ghosts wear their kimono with the right portion on the top like this? I definitely learned something new here.
IG @maria.over
Artist comment: Today’s prompt is SECRET. - In winter, when Thumbelina finds shelter in the field mouse‘s home, she discovers a swallow that fell from the sky. She feels so sad remembering how it beautifully it sang in the summer and secretly warms the swallow bedding it on soft wool and covering it with a woven grass blanket. Just as she lays her head on the swallow‘s chest, she suddenly hears a heartbeat – the swallow isn’t dead at all!
IG @heidewitz
Artist comment: SECRET 🔮🌀🦇 - She knows your future, but she will not tell.
IG @friederickeablang
Artist comment: No one knows the secret within: - Silence and light and human skin. - 2 - secret of #folktaleweek
IG @sveta_solarni
Artist comment: N/A (Ed: Nice depiction of The Frog Tsarevna!
IG @marieroberts
Artist comment: N/A
IG @annekecaramin
Artist comment: Day 2 of Folktaleweek and the prompt was 'Secret'! Last year I focused on local Belgian folktales and legends, and did the same thing this time. I found a little story about a witch who took the appearance of a hare to play in the moonlight, and was found out when her lover shot the hare, only to find his injured beloved in its place...
IG @artbyemilyskinner
Artist comment: Day 2 prompt "secret". I wanted to try this one as B&W line. This witch has many secrets- she is a shapeshifter, changing into a cat (and in some versions of the story an owl), she lures wild animals to her house to feed on, and she turns young women into birds which she keeps in cages.
IG @bettabasile
Artist comment: Hansel secretly dropped the bits of breadcrumbs that would allow them to find the house again...
IG @paperartbyanni
Artist comment: 2nd day of #folktaleweek2019 #secret - Do you remember the tale of the king with donkey ears? Not a cheerful story but at least there is a happy end in most of the versions. The lesson to be learned is that „nothing is secret that will not be revealed”. 
IG @aliocha.gouverneur_art
Artist comment: N/A
IG @thistlemoon
Artist comment: day 2 - Secret. I love seals, so for this prompt I chose selkies! A selkie is a mythological creature that can change its shape from seal to human form by shedding its skin. According to Scottish folklore, if a man stole a selkie’s seal skin she could be forced to be his wife, although she would forever long to return to the sea. She would live as a human, keeping her true form a secret as her husband wished to hold her for himself. However, in some versions of the tale she would regain her skin and immediately return to the sea. I always recommend the film Song of the Sea by @cartoonsaloon for a beautiful interpretation of the Irish selkie folktale.
IG @annna_oparina (yes, 3 'A's in annna!)
Artist comment: 3. Secret 🤐 ✨
IG @victoria_portraits
Artist comment: N/A
IG @louisegouet
Artist comment: Day two of Folk Tale Week: Secret 🌙 This is the tale of Tristan and Isolde, which is associated with Tintagel, Cornwall. 🏰 - Tristan, a Cornish Knight, was sent to Ireland to bring Isolde back to be the king’s wife. On the way back they both accidentally drank a love potion that was meant for the king, and fell deeply in love. Isolde married the king but kept Tristan as her secret lover. Eventually the king found out and banished Tristan to Brittany. There he found a wife but continued to love Isolde. One day he was wounded and sent for her to nurse him- if she agreed she was meant to come in a ship with a white sail. His new wife was jealous and told him that the ship had a black sail, and he died of heartbreak. When Isolde reached him too late she lay down and died in his arms. 🗡
IG @zhuravlyova_valeria
Artist comment: "Secret" and this is my second illo for #folktaleweek2019 is based on the Russian folktale Princess the Frog
IG @farrell_annemarie
Artist comment: Today’s prompt is #secret . I’m using a scene from The Twelve Dancing Princesses in which a King wonders how his daughters’ dancing shoes are always worn out? Spoiler alert... those little rascals are drugging the guards and escaping down a secret trapdoor to get up to their shenanigans! My kind of princesses. 😜 (*no guards were drugged in this scene... he is faking and follows them under an invisibility cloak!) 
IG @nerd_cats
Artist comment: Day 2 of #folktaleweek2019 is “secret”. I found the tale of Ursila from Stronsay, which tells the story of a woman named Ursila, who takes a Male “selkie”, one of the seal-folks, as a lover. After that she has many children, but each one is born with strange webbing between their fingers and toes. The midwife would cut off the webbing, in order to keep Ursila’s secret...
IG @lydiapudel
Artist comment: Day 2 of #folktaleweek The prompt is #secret - Unce upon a time there were a gorgeous princess with an evil stepmother who were a mad queen and a sourceress. The girl fell in love with a common guy and that was not the fate the stepmother intendet for the girl. -So she cursed the boy and he turned into a bear. But the girl was not afraid of the bear or her stepmother and kept visiting her love and searching for a solution to break the curse! 🏰🍄🌕🌺 Many russian folktales involve bears and stags and pretty girls. So did this one.😊
IG @misheru_does_art
Artist comment: Day 2: Secret - A MANANANGGAL is usually depicted as a flying vampiric female with only half of her body and having bat-like wings. The other half left in a hideaway within the thicket of the jungle. In daytime she lives and walks amongst humans but come darkness she detaches her upper torso from her lower body and sets off to hunt. She feeds off babies and fetuses from pregnant women by sucking the blood through the mother’s navel using her elongated tongue that passes through a secret hole from the roof of the victim’s house. - Sunlight is deadly and so she must return to her lair and her lower torso at dawn. It is also said that in order to kill the monster, one must search for the lower half of her body and pour salt, garlic or ash over the exposed flesh to prevent the transformation of the manananggal back into her human form. The same ingredients kept in the house should veer off any attack. - The Manananggal may well be the most popular monster or aswang in the country for other regions have similar creatures only with slight variations in gender, feeding habits and body structure. A wakwak from Surigao is something of human bird that flies in the night in search of a victim. The Bikolanos also believe in other beings such as the asuwang na layog, who transforms into a winged creature under houses, and the anananggal, who is similar to the manananggal. The Ungo of Zamboanga also has wings, lived among humans during the day but feeds on the dead, while the Tiyu-an of Capiz is a woman with a puppy by day but in the dark of night keeps its body in tact as it flies to hunt for babies and pregnant women.
IG @edra.artist
Artist comment: #segreto #secret #fiaba #tale #barbablu #bluebeard #folktaleweek #folktaleweek2019
IG @echo.ism
Artist comment: The Loom at Night - #folktaleweek 2/7, Secret - The Crane Wife, from the japanese folktale... Tried to use colours I usually don’t, and finding it hard 😂
IG @ashley_mckee
Artist comment: For “secret” I chose the old Jack Tale Jack and the Giants New Ground. The king hires Jack to rid the land of a family of grumpy giants that have killed every man who’s attempted to clear the land. Jack reluctantly agrees. His wits help him to defeat the giant children of the old giant and his wife (all of whom have multiple heads). The giant couple decide they need to get rid of Jack before he gets rid of them, and they secretly plot to cook him for dinner. The story describes the oven and the shelf above the fireplace. I included a comb on the shelf because the mother giant wants to comb Jack before preparing him for dinner. The giants didn’t realize that Jack was listening from an opening in the door. As a result, he was able to think fast to save himself and defeat the giants.
IG @manon_ga_
Artist comment: The secrets stir curiosity, so I drew the pandora box.
IG @thunder_sky_illustrations
Artist comment: Folktale week day 2 "secret" - A Northumbrian tale of The three treacle wells of longwitton
Near the town of longwitton there were three wells said to have healing powers, they became so popular they drew the attention of a ferocious "worm" (dragon) ... Upon drinking the water the dragon turned invisible and from that day forward none could use the wells for fear of the invisible worm who guarded them. An adventurous traveller vowed to rid the wells of the worm and acquired a magic salve which when applied to his eyes allowed him to see the unseen... Despite being able to now see the worm every blow he dealt the beast with his blade magically healed itself. The traveller returned the next day and as he fought once again he noticed that the dragon would never venture too far from the wells. It was then that he discovered the worms secret, his tail was always dipped into the healing water of one of the treacle wells allowing him to recover instantly during battle. The brave traveller lured the beast as far away from the wells as he could and then darting forward made a swift blow to the creatures tail with his sword, thus separating it from the healing properties of the water. He then succeeded in slaying the worm and ridding the town of longwitton of the beast.
IG @visiongonegrey
Artist comment: Day 2: Secret “shhh no one knows what happened to grandma”
IG @elleasparuhova
Artist comment: Once upon a time there was a boy who had a secret. He was so scared to say it out loud that he locked it inside himself with a key and lost trust in everyone. - He was so cautions about losing the key... as losing it meant that everyone would know his secret and he would be alone for the rest of his days, that the key turned as blue as him...And so the boy spent the rest of his days looking after the key as if his life depended on it...letting life go by.. - ‘My sad, sad boy.... do you feel less lonely, now that I finally know your secret..?’ - Folktale week day 2 - Secret
IG @kendra_binney
Artist comment: And about that sea monster.... #folktaleweek day 2: secret.
IG @natelledrawsstuff
Artist comment:  Day Two prompt for Folktale Week is SECRET 💜 The story I chose to illustrate is The Cowherd and The Weaver Girl. Swipe across to see a closeup of the Weaver Girl! - 💜The pair fell in love, and kept their relationship a secret, but their love was discovered, and they were both punished to opposite ends of the milkyway 😱 But on a special day every year, flocks of magpies would form a bridge between them, so that the lovers could reunite for one day. This story is a popular one and there are many renditions of it!
IG @yfmnko
Artist comment: Part 2. Secret/Секрет.🐦 That girl, who lived near the forest, knew about herself one not simple feature. Contrary to her will, something incredible happened to her as soon as the first stars appeared in the sky. Every night, her hands were replaced by wings, and her dark wavy hair was intertwined with feathers. The girl became half a bird.Unable to control this, she always hid in her room under the very roof of the house.In one of many such strange for her nights have lost count how many there were, there was what she was so afraid. The night was clear. Marvelous the moon splashed on each branch, has filled the whole space with its cold light, and in the window glowed warm candle flame. Inadvertently, the girl forgot to lock the window and she was noticed First. One of the villagers saw the winged creature so clearly that he cried out from the horror of misunderstanding what he saw. The girl started and uncertainly turned around. She was always afraid of this, afraid to be noticed by someone, because what will happen to her then? The half-bird abruptly flew out of the room. Away. I ran away.
IG @laure_illustrations
Artist comment: A tale from Suriname 🐆 ... A jaguar was so impressed by a hunters skills that he changed shape and became a beautiful woman to seduce the hunter. They lived and hunted together happily until the villagers became suspicious. The villagers got the mother in law of the jaguar woman drunk and she told them her secret. After that, the jaguar woman went back to the jungle and the poor hunter never saw his beloved wife again.
IG @shantala_robinson

Artist comment:  
'Secret'.She jumped into the lake with the cows, bull and calf training after her. Another folk tale. Keeping it monochromatic. 
IG @artspellmagic
Artist comment: Folktale Week Day 2: SECRET - Inspired by the German folktale “The Snake” published by the Zingerle Brothers about a girl who is asked to marry a snake and receives a secret revelation that the snake will transform into a handsome young man on their wedding night if she asks him to shed his seven skins.
IG @flakesandtales
Artist comment: Folktale week day 2! This wolf is keeping secrets, don't fall for his tricks ✨ #folktaleweek2019
IG @noteswithscribbles
Artist comment: The girl from the six swans is about to discover the #secret to turn her brothers back into humans. This drawing was the result of an inkober sketch that I finally polished today. I’ve posted it before but I need to see it within the series it generated - I don’t think I can really match it, but I don’t mind. Because there is a certain special magic inherent in a moment I would have loved as a girl, when I dreamed of getting this close to birds. 
IG @lalunadraw
Artist comment:  day 2 - Secret - Today’s story from Greek Mythology -Secret inside the Pandora’s Box-
“...Pandora was trying to tame her curiosity, but at the end she could not hold herself anymore; she opened the box and all the envy, sickness, hate, disease that gods had hidden in the box started coming out.”
IG @st.kamila
Artist comment: Day 2 : SECRET - Gouache painting process inspired by old Asian fairytale about a wife turning into heron.
IG @marjolaineroller
Artist comment: "Open all doors, go into each and every one of my appartments, except that little closet, which I forbid you, and forbid it in such a manner that, if you happen to open it, you may expect my just anger and resentment." She promised but one day the #temptation was so strong that she could not overcome it... 😳😰😱 #bluebeard
IG @scottkeenanillo
Artist comment: Day 2 of #folktaleweek ‘Secret’ This witch definitely has a deadly secret that Hansel and Gretel don’t know about yet! 🍬 .
IG @babushkina_irra
Artist comment: The little secret of a big forest.
IG @passionflower_art_design
Artist comment: The Seven Ravens by Brothers Grimm. An interesting tale of disappointment, secrets, devotion and restoration. The King was so disappointed in his 7 precious sons that a careless curse turned them all into ravens. 👉🏻Stay tuned for the rest of the story😊
IG @fraeuleineichhorn
Artist comment: Folktaleweek Day II: "The Singing Bone" - a tale about two brothers who hunt a boar to win the princess's hand in marriage. The younger brother is successful and the older kills him to win the prize himself. A shepherd finds a bone under the bridge where the body is buried and turns it into a flute. When he plays it the bone reveals the #secret of the younger brother's death
IG @leonora_camusso
Artist comment: The second prompt for the #folktale week is: secret - At Nido dell'Orso, above Prali, on the Piedmontese Alps in Italy, there were two sisters of opposite souls: one was kind and a great worker, the other was rude and lazy. Although the good girl spent her days at work in the stable, she always had some money to buy new clothes and jewels that exalted her beauty. The jealous sister wanted to discover her secret and decided to spy on the girl while she was at work. And so, she saw that a black kitten came into the stable every day and the good girl offered him a bowl of fresh milk. - What she didn't see, though, was the kitten that, after drinking all the milk, tapped the bowl until it magically filled with silver coins. - To discover the mystery, the lazy girl asked her sister to go to the stable in her place. The following day, when she found herself in front of the cat asking for milk, instead of stretching out the bowl she kicked it out. The cat came out of the barn and turned into a fairy, who, with an indignant gaze, abandoned those valleys forever.
IG @hoillustration_
Artist comment: Day Two (real time this time) of Folktale Week and it’s unsurprisingly more Angela from me, this time from ‘The Tiger’s Bride’. The prompt was SECRET and it came out super creepy? - ‘He throws our human aspirations to the godlike sadly awry, poor fellow; only from a distance would you think The Beast not much different from any other man, although he wears a mask with a man's face painted most beautifully on it. Oh, yes, a beautiful face; but one with too much formal symmetry of feature to be entirely human: one profile of his mask is the mirror image of the other, too perfect, uncanny. He wears a wig, too, false hair tied at the nape with a bow, a wig of the kind you see in old-fashioned portraits. A chaste silk stock stuck with a pearl hides his throat. And gloves of blond kid that are yet so huge and clumsy they do not seem to cover hands.’⁣
IG @juliachristiansde
Artist comment: FOLKTALEWEEK ↟ I am telling storys from my region the Harz mountains again this year.
#folktaleweek Day 2: secret - Once there was a miner who was working so fast that his colleagues said, that only the devil could work with him. The devil heard about that and came to challenge the miner. Both worked like crazy but the devil won. At the end of the day they got payed 400 coins and one penny which they had to split up. They argued long until the miner threw the penny into a shaft and the devil jumped right after it and he is still living in that shaft, which is now called the devils shaft.
IG @robotswebe2
Artist comment: N/A
IG @Ibleckster
Artist comment: Day 2 #folktaleweek “Secret” The King of the Sharks a Hawaiian tale of a shark that falls in love with a girl by the pool. When their son was born with markings of the shark he was told to wear the cape to conceal the secret.
IG @carolinebonnemuller
Artist comment: Day 2: Secret - I illustrated the harpist who is secretly the Tsarina, to rescue her Tsar. I used the beautiful story ‘The wandering Harpist’ from Russia. I found this story in the great book; The Lost Fairy tales, written by Isabel Otter and illustrated by Ana Sender, published by @caterpillar_books For many Sunday mornings I was reading these magical stories to my son.
IG @kattonop
Artist comment: 2️⃣Secret - Spanish tale tells about shepherd girl who finds a little cobra snake and keeps it with her secretly. But that's not a regular snake, she is an enchanted princess. . .
IG @katijatomic_artist
Artist comment: Day2 SECRET - She was awoken by a faint creaky noise ....it was her third night as a guest in this old French chateau, and since there was no going back to sleep for her, she decided to explore it. Upon discovering this beautiful library, filled with amazing one of a kind and first additions , she was drawn to one book that was placed upside down. She picked it up,when suddenly one of the bookcases started to slowly turn making this creaky noise that woke her up earlier.....
IG @jacqui.langeland
Artist comment: N/A
IG @sandhyaprybhat
Artist comment: N/A
IG @elitsa_nn
Artist comment: N/A
IG @cloverlie
Artist comment: Day 2 - Secret, “Seal Maiden” - I stretched this prompt as an excuse to draw a selkie, as their lives seem to be steeped in secrets; their human form is vulnerable if discovered and their sealskin stolen, for as long as it is kept hidden, they’re bound to the land.

TOMORROW'S PROMPT IS PATH.