Sendak and Colbert — Jackpot!

nbsp;http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert…

There are many great moments in this 2-part interview.  “I write” Sendak tells Colbert, “and then somebody says it’s for children.”

On the current state of children’s literature, Sendak’s verdict is “abysmal.”

“Give a Mouse a Cookie”–ugh!

Sendak: “You trapped me” when Colbert asks him whether The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is a good children’s book.

Expect to see  I am a Pole–and So Can You on the bestseller list, with blurbs and drawings by Sendak.

 

Pop-up Books

 

Zachary Sniderman discusses the fate of pop-up books in an age of electronic entertainments.  And Robert Sabuda reminds us, in his Alice in Wonderland,  that you can still compete with John Tenniel.

Are pop-up books dying? We remember pulling our first paper tab and seeing a book miraculously come to life. But a lot of kids these days are getting that kick on iPads and other fancy tablets. Which makes one wonder if the steady stream of interactive ebooks aimed at kids means that this generation won’t have childhood memories of Pat the Bunny, Where’s Spot, or Peter Rabbit?


http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/01/20/do-tablet-apps-and-ebooks-spell-the-end-of-pop-up-books.htm

Dreaming Stories Up

 

The Atlantic has a nice slide show about the inspiration for children’s books.

 http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment…

If he were still alive, Alan Alexander Milne—you may know him as A. A. Milne—would have turned 130 years old yesterday. If you’re a fan of Milne’s books, you probably know that you can go and see the original teddy bear that inspired the character of Winnie-the-Pooh if you visit the New York Public Library—it’s on display there along with a selection of other similar stuffed toys that inspired Tigger, Eeyore, and Piglet.

 

 

 

Rob Marshall brings “Into the Woods” to the Big Screen

Here’s some exciting news about Into the Woods.  A summer production in NYC’s Central Park seems like a perfect warm-up act for the film.  The musical has a wonderful cross-generational appeal, and it shows us the dark side of the fairy-tale world even as it preserves the incandescent beauty and irreverent humor of the tales.

Want the lyrics?

 http://www.mit.edu/~nocturne/athena/text…

 The way is dark,
  The light is dim,
  But now there's you, me, her, and him.
  The chances look small,
  The choices look grim,
  But everything you learn there
  Will help when you return there.

 http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment…

 

“We are thrilled to be collaborating with Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine on this extraordinary and inspiring work,” Marshall and producing partner John DeLuca said in a joint statement.

It’s not the first time a Hollywood studio has tried to adapt the musical for the big screen, Broadway.com reported. Columbia Pictures tried developing “Into the Woods” with director Rob Minkoff, but there proved to be no storybook ending for that project.

Grimm Legacies: February 3/4

Here’s the latest on the Grimm Legacies Symposium at Harvard University on February 3/4.

 http://web.me.com/folkmyth/Folk_%26_Myth…

Friday, February 3rd:

 

4:00 – 5:00 pm – Heidi Heiner of Sur La Lune: Workshop

 

6:00 – 7:30 pm – Jack Zipes, Keynote Speaker

“Two Hundred Years after Once Upon a Time: The Legacy of the

Brothers Grimm and their Tales in Germany”

 

 

Saturday, February 4th:

 

9:00 – 9:30 am – Welcome: Maria Tatar

 

 

9:30 – 11:15 am – INTO THE WOODS

 

Cara Zimmerman

“Henry Darger, Adolf Wolfli, and Tales of Violence in Outsider Art”

 

David Rice

“When the Forest Becomes the Woods: The Horror Effect in the Grimms; Hansel and Gretel and Beyond”

 

Megan Leroy

“Domestic Adaptations: Anne Sexton’s Transformations and the Grimms’ Tales”

 

Katie Orenstein

 

 

11:30 – 1:00 pm – UNDER THE KNIFE

 

Valerie Gribben

“Medicine and Märchen”

 

Ariane Mandell

“Empowered by Tears: Weeping in Grimm’s Fairy Tales”

 

Perri Klass

“Grimm and the Experts:  Psychiatrists, Pediatricians, and Pundits”

 

 

1:00 – 1:45 pm – Lunch

 

1:45 – 2:15 pm – Presentation

 

 

2:15 – 3:45 pm – AMONG THE BEASTS

 

Ruth Lingford

 

David Elmer

“The Metamorphosis of a Folktale: ‘Beauty and the Beast’ in Apuleius’ Metamorphoses.”

 

Jerry Griswold

“The Many Conclusions of ‘Beauty and the Beast’”

 

 

4:00 – 5:45 pm – THROUGH THE MAGIC MIRROR

 

John Cech

“The Grimms, Sendak, and the Zeitgeist”

 

Michael Hearn

“Increasing the Happiness of Children:  George Cruikshank Illustrates the Brothers Grimm”

 

Kate Bernheimer

“The Grimm Art of Fairy-Tale Editorship”

 

Claudia Schwabe

“Between Socialism and Snow White: GDR Fairy Tales”

 

 

5:45 – 6:30 pm – Wrap Up

And now for the boys

 http://trailers.apple.com/trailers/wb/ja…

From the makers of X-Men (yes, you heard it right) comes Jack the Giant Killer.  Thanks to the wonderful Jessica Fox for sending me the link to the trailer.

Jack the Giant Killer” tells the story of an ancient war that is reignited when a young farmhand unwittinglyopens a gateway between our world and a fearsome race of giants. Unleashed on the Earth for the first time in centuries, the giants strive to reclaim the land they once lost, forcing the young man, Jack, into the battle of his life to stop them. Fighting for a kingdom, its people, and the love of a brave princess, he comes face to face with the unstoppable warriors he thought only existed in legend–and gets the chance to become a legend himself.

Cinderella’s Sisters and Footbinding

Dorothy Ko’s Cinderella’s Sisters: A Revisionist History of Footbinding has been the standard work on the ancient practice for several years now.  Ko’s premise is that footbinding was “an embodied experience, a reality to a select group of women from the twelfth to the twentieth centuries.”  Instead of denouncing it, she aims to understand “the powerful forces that made binding feet a conventional practice . . .  The reality of the practice lies not only in the screams and tears on a girl’s first day of biding, but also in the assiduous maintenance and care she had to lavish on her feet every day for the rest of her life.”  Ko points out that Hill Gates and Laurel Bossen, featured in the link below, offer an explanation of footbinding based on fieldwork in Sichuan and Fujian: “Peasant women with bound feet routinely performed such tasks as spinning and weaving, oyster shucking, and tea picking, which required strength and skill in her hands but not her feet.  Footbinding lost its raison d’etre when factory-based textile production replaced home-based spinning and weaving.”  Ko points out that footbinding is not a uniform and timeless practice “motivated by a single cause” and that monocausal explanations misfire, failing to grasp the complexities of the social practice.

 http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/20…

In the Grimms’ “Cinderella,” the stepsisters famously cut off their toes and heels to make the shoe fit.  I’ve often been asked whether that episode has a contemporary analogue in plastic surgery and other cosmetic practices.  Here’s one answer:

 

Neverland on Syfy tonight 9/8c

Here’s a description of the 2 episode series, with Part 1 airing tonight!

Neverland, a prequel to author J.M. Barrie’s classic, Peter Pan, sweeps in time from the turbulent seas of the pirates of the Caribbean and the back alleys of Dickensian London to a world of pure imagination. The cast includes Rhys Ifans (Pirate Radio, Notting Hill) as James Hook,  Oscar nominee Keira Knightley as the voice of Tinker Bell, Anna Friel (Pushing Daisies) as Captain Elizabeth Bonny, Oscar nominee Bob Hoskins as Smee (who previously played the character in Steven Spielberg’s feature, Hook), Raoul Trujillo (Tin Man) and Charlie Rowe (Pirate Radio) as one of literature’s most cherished characters, Peter Pan.

Peter (Rowe), along with his pals of young pickpockets, have been rounded up by their mentor Jimmy Hook (Ifans) to snatch a magical orb which transports them to another world – Neverland.  Filled with white jungles and imposing cities formed out of trees created by Dr. Fludd (Dance) and inhabited by a colony of tree spirits led by Tinker Bell (Knightley), this mysterious realm welcomes unknown friends and enemies snatched from time.  These include power-mad Elizabeth Bonny (Friel) and her band of 18th century pirates who search for the answer to eternal youth, a secret guarded by a Holy Man (Trujillo).  As the fight to save this strange and beautiful world escalates, Peter and his crew consider that growing old somewhere in time could be less important than growing up—right here in their new home called Neverland.

Great cinematography and the opening sequences with Jim and the pickpockets are excellent.  I have a small quibble about Tinker Bell, who is said to get her name from the rapid movement of her wings, though nothing wrong with some poetic license.  I’ll tune in tonight for Part II.  Hoskins’ reprise of Smee is sublime.

The NYT weighs in:

 http://tv.nytimes.com/2011/12/03/arts/te…

Julia Leigh’s “Sleeping Beauty”

 

A.O. Scott reviews a new “Sleeping Beauty” film made by Julia Leigh:

 http://movies.nytimes.com/2011/12/02/mov…

At a certain point Lucy wants to find out what happens while she is under the spell of Clara’s potion, and she buys a small video camera for the purpose. We already know, of course, but the gap between our perception and Lucy’s emphasizes the film’s deeper secret — or perhaps its most effective tease — which is what goes on in her mind.

In a video interview, Julia Leigh describes how the camera is more or less on the fourth wall of the cinematic space, allowing the viewer to see more than Lucy sees and making us complicit in what appears on screen.  I would add complicit with the filmmaker’s  fetishizing of the female body.

 http://video.nytimes.com/video/2011/12/0…

Here’s a report from the screening at Cannes:

 http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/movies/2…

With its title, its dreamlike moments and a madam whose personality wouldn’t be out of place in a Grimm Brothers tale, Leigh’s movie also has a fairy-tale quality, continuing a theme that has transfixed Hollywood lately. For her part, Leigh was not shy about mentioning her influences, which she said include King Solomon (like the characters in the film, she said, he had young women keep him warm in his old age), Gandhi (he tested his chastity by doing same) and “the shady world of the Internet” and its escort services.

Thanks to my student Wendy Chang for calling my attention to the film.