Once
upon a time, in a little house by a little town in a kingdom far, far
away (some place you've probably never heard of), a young man named
Ellan lived with his family.
Ellan's
mother had died long ago, and his father had remarried to a widow.
Lady Belda was a well-intentioned stepmother, with her own two
daughters: Lila and Jami.
A
few years after the two families united, Ellan's father died while
out on a trip. Lady Belda ran things as well as she could, budgeting
and scraping by to take care of her daughters and stepson. But after
Ellan turned 18, she told him he was now the man of the house and
would need to help with the care of the household.
This
is not to say Lila and Jami didn't help out. They'd help milk and
gather eggs and sell the spares in town as Ellan would go to take
care of business. In this way, the family lived happily and
respectfully and quite well off.
One
day a handsome young man named Roderick bought some milk from Lila
and stayed to talk with her. Afterward, he would come by and speak
with her every day, and Ellan and Jami realized their sister was
falling in love. They mentioned it to Lady Belda after this had been
going on for about a week.
"Yes,"
she said, "I knew this would begin to happen soon. One by one,
you will all fall in love and get married. Jami will sooner or later
find a husband, and you, Ellan, will find a wife, and she will become
the lady of the house."
Ellan
nodded and thought about all the women he'd met. Did he think any of
them might be one he'd want to marry? To be honest, no. The thought
had never crossed his mind before. But never mind, he probably just
hadn't met the right girl yet. It was something that would make Ellan
wonder for quite some time.
Some
weeks later, Ellan had finished his business and was bringing some
lunch to his sisters to the market when he heard a cry:
"The
Prince is coming!"
People
in the market hurried towards buildings and carts, clearing the way
for the prince to ride in. As the horse bearing the prince came in,
everyone bowed or curtsied to the son of the king and queen.
Except
Ellan. He was about to bow until he actually saw the prince. "What
a handsome man," he thought. He stood and stared as the Prince
and a mounted guard stopped to see the people.
"You,
bow!" shouted the guard. It took Ellan a second before he
realized that the guard was addressing him, and he began to bow.
"No,
wait," said the Prince with a kind voice, "it's perfectly
all right." He smiled at Ellan. "You may all rise!"
Everyone
stood and began to resume their business as the Prince and the guard
rode away towards the palace. It was then that a little song came to
Ellan's head.
The sweetest sounds I've ever known
Are still inside my head
The kindest words I've yet to hear
Are waiting to be said
The most entrancing sight of all
Is yet for me to see
And the dearest love in all the world
Is waiting somewhere for me.
He
never told his stepsisters about what he had thought in the
marketplace.
The
Prince had just been returning from spending a few years training to
be a good king in a nearby kingdom. Now he was heading home to join
his parents in their royal court.
After
talking about what he'd learned in other countries, his mother asked
him if he'd found a bride.
"It
often happens that you meet a woman who will be your bride while
you're away training," she said. "That is how I met your
father, and your grandmother met your grandfather."
"Yeah,
son, is there anyone?" asked the King.
The
Prince drummed his fingers on the table. "No," he said at
last. "The girls I met were lovely, but... well, none of them
struck my fancy."
"Surely,"
replied the Queen, "there must be someone out there who will."
"I
suppose so," the Prince said nervously.
"Well,
why don't we try to have you meet some?" the King suggested.
"A
wonderful idea!" laughed the Queen, clapping her hands. "We'll
have a ball and invite all the eligible maidens in the country!"
So
it was that the next day that a page rode out into the marketplace
with two trumpeteers who sounded the trumpets. The Page began to
sing:
"The prince is giving a ball!"
Everyone
in the marketplace crowded around and sang in excitement, "The
prince is giving a ball! The prince is giving a ball!"
The
Page smiled and sang, "His royal highness, Christopher Rupert
Vwindemier Vlandamier Carl Alexander Francois Reginald Lancelot
Herman..."
"HERMAN?"
laughed Ellan out loud.
"Herman!"
the Page repeated before continuing, "...Gregory James is
giving a ball!"
"The
prince is giving a ball!" The people sang. "The
prince is giving a ball!"
"Our
daughter's looking dreamy-eyed," chuckled a father.
"The
prince is giving a ball," sang his daughter, "they
say he wants to find a bride, he may find one at the ball!"
"If
only he'd propose to me," muttered Ellan under his breath.
"I
pray that he'll propose to me!" sang a young woman.
"Why
shouldn't he propose to me?" wondered another one.
"I
wish I hadn’t married Sam," sighed a somewhat older woman.
"Pull
in your little diaphragm," instructed a mother to her
daughter.
"I'll
wear a gown of satin jade," the daughter sighed.
"And
me I'm in a pink brocade," laughed another woman.
"And
me I'm in the second grade!" groaned a little girl.
"The
prince is giving a ball!" the people sang. "The prince
is giving a ball!"
The
page repeated his proclamation:
"His
royal highness, Christopher Rupert, son of her majesty Queen
Constantina Charlotte Hermantrude Guinevere Mazie..."
"MAZIE?"
wondered a few people in the crowd.
"Mazie!"
repeated the Page. "...Marguerite Ann is giving a ball!"
"The
prince is giving a ball!" Ellan thought in excitement. "The
prince is giving a ball!"
"I
wish I didn’t like to eat," sighed a woman with a rotund
belly.
"I
wish I were demure and sweet," groaned a woman with a
snaggle tooth.
"I
wish I were a bolder girl," whispered a girl near Ellan.
"I
wish I were a younger girl," laughed an old woman dryly.
"I
wish I were an older girl!" added the same little girl.
"The
prince is giving a ball!" The people sang. "The
prince is giving a ball!"
The
page decided to finish the proclamation: "His Royal
Highness, Christopher Rupert, son of his majesty King Maximilian Godfree Lancelot Leopold Sydney..."
"SYDNEY?"
laughed the old woman.
"Sydney!"
the page groaned. "...Frederick John is giving a ball!"
And
with that, the page rode away. Ellan walked towards his stepsisters
as the people sang, "The prince is giving a ball! The prince
is giving a ball! The prince is giving a ball!"
Lila
and Jami were amused by Ellan's news about the Prince. "I wonder
if everyone will be allowed to go?" wondered Lila. "I love
Roderick, but I wouldn't mind going to the ball just for fun."
"Me
too," added Jami. "I don't think I'd want to marry a
prince, but a night to dress up and dance would be nice."
Ellan
chuckled quietly to himself. He wouldn't mind meeting the prince, but
if the ball was to find a woman for the prince to marry, he wouldn't
have much of a chance to say two words.
Formal
invitations had been sent out to every home and Lady Belda was
excited.
"We
must go!" she cheered. "I'll fix up our finest dresses and
you two will look so lovely at the ball! And imagine if the Prince
decided he wanted to marry one of you!"
"But
I love Roderick," replied Lila. "I don't want to marry the
Prince."
"Well,
what about you, Jami?" asked Lady Belda. "You're not
attached to anyone."
"Well,
I want to go," she began.
"Then
we'd better hope he picks you!" Lady Belda laughed and went off
to the kitchen to begin preparing dinner.
Later
that night, as Ellan was heading to bed, he was passing Jami's room
and heard her singing softly.
"I'm as mild and as meek as a mouse
When I hear a command I obey.
But I know of a spot in my house
Where no one can stand in my way.
In my own little corner in my own little chair
I can be whatever I want to be.
On the wings of my fancy I can fly anywhere
and the world will open its arms to me.
I'm a young Norwegian princess or a milkmaid
I'm the greatest prima donna in Milan
I'm an heiress who has always had her silk made
By her own flock of silkworms in Japan."
"I
really don't want to marry the Prince," she sighed. "I wish
mother would understand that."
Ellan
hugged her.
"Can
I tell you a secret?" he asked her.
She
nodded.
"I
want to meet the Prince, I... I like him," he said.
"You
love the Prince!" she chuckled. "That's okay. I don't want
to marry him because I find myself liking other women."
Ellan
laughed and sang,
"I'm a man men go mad for love's a game I can play
with cool and confident kind of air.
Just as long as I stay in my own little corner
All alone in my own little chair."
Jami
smiled and sang.
"I can be whatever I want to be.
I'm a thief in Calcutta, I'm a queen in Peru.
I'm a mermaid dancing upon the sea
I'm a huntress on an African safari,
It's a dangerous type of sport and yet it's fun
In the night I sally forth to seek my quarry
And I find I forgot to bring my gun.
I am lost in the jungle all alone and unarmed
When I meet a lioness in her lair
Then I'm glad to be back in my own little corner,
All alone in my own little chair."
Ellan
and Jami hugged.
"Good
night," said Ellan and he went to his bedroom.
In a
few days, the night of the ball arrived. Ellan had taken out his best
suit and made sure it was in the best shape. Lila, Jami and Lady
Belda made their best dresses look spectacular. As a carriage arrived
to take them to the ball, the family met in the front yard.
"Why
are you dressed up?" Lady Belda asked Ellan.
"Oh,
I thought I'd go to the ball as well," was the reply.
"But
the Prince is looking for a bride. They don't want young men
visiting."
"Actually,"
interjected Jami, "the invitation said that the Prince was
seeking a bride, but it said all were invited."
"By
which we must assume he only wanted women," Lady Belda said
calmly.
"Perhaps
I could go as a chaperone and dance?" Ellan said. He had to get
to the ball.
"No,
the invitation didn't say anything about that. I'm afraid you'll have
to stay at home, Ellan."
Ellan
sighed and went inside as he heard the carriage pull up and his
stepfamily get inside and drive off. Quietly, he began to sing to
himself.
"In my own little corner,
In my own little chair,
I can be whatever I want to be.
On the wing of my fancy,
I can fly anywhere,
And the world will open it's arms to me.
"I am in the royal palace,
Of all places!
I am chatting with the prince,
And king, and queen.
And the color of all those ladies' faces
Is a queer sort of sour apple green.
I am coy and flirtatious when alone with the prince
With cool and confident kind of air.
I'm the Belle of the Ball in my own little corner,
All alone in my own little chair."
He
sighed.
"Fol-de-rol and fiddle-dee-dee,
Fiddle-dee-faddle-dee-foddle.
All the wishes in all the world
Are poppycock and twaddle."
Ellan
looked up and saw at the open front window, an older gentleman
dressed in a nice purple suit. It took him a moment to recognize him
as godfather. who he had not seen in years but still sent gifts to
the family from time to time.
"Hello,
godfather," Ellan said, "nice to see you."
"I
thought you might be lonely," said Godfather. "And I knew
what you'd be doing."
Ellan
looked sheepishly at him and the Godfather sang,
"I just knew I would find
you in that same little chair
In the paling bliss of a
foolish dream, but...
Fol-de-rol and fiddle-dee-dee,
Fiddle-dee-faddle-dee-foodle,
All the dreamers in all the world
Are dizzy in the noodle!"
"I'm
in love with the prince!" said Ellan. "What can I do about
that?"
"There's
no shame in loving someone," grinned the Godfather. "But,
you realize, you can't just storm into the ball and declare your
love. Anyway, how would you get there?"
Ellan
sighed. "I don't know. There's a pumpkin growing outside. I
guess it'd make a fine carriage if it was big enough. And maybe those
four white mice we caught today could pull it, if they were, I don't
know, turned into horses."
"But
that is impossible," chuckled the Godfather. He stepped inside
and began to sing.
"Impossible for a plain yellow pumpkin to become a golden
carriage.
Impossible for a plain country bumpkin and a prince to join in
marriage.
And four white mice will never be four white horses.
Such fol-de-rol and fiddle dee dee of courses.
"Impossible!"
Ellan
sighed. It looked like his dream would never come true. Then the
Godfather continued to sing.
"But the world is full of zanies and fools
Who don't believe in sensible rules
And won't believe what sensible people say
And because these daft and dewey eyed dopes keep building up
impossible hopes
Impossible things are happening every day!"
"Wait,"
Ellan murmured. "If impossible things are happening every day,
then... I could go?"
"Perhaps,"
said the Godfather. "If you wish hard enough."
"Then
I will!" Ellan declared. "No one will stop me!"
Almost
on cue, he saw the pumpkin outside grow large and turn into a golden
colored carriage and the cage holding the four white mice broke open
as the mice grew into handsome horses. As Ellan went outside to look,
the Godfather followed him out, and Ellan didn't notice that a pair
of brightly colored wings had sprouted from the Godfather's back.
"It's possible for a plain yellow pumpkin to become a golden
carriage.
It's possible for a plain country bumpkin and a prince to join in
marriage.
And four white mice are easily turned to horses
Such fol-de-rol and fiddle dee dee of courses
"Quite possible!
"For the world is full of zanies and fools
Who don't believe in sensible rules
And won't believe what sensible people say
And because these daft and dewey eyed dopes keep building up
impossible hopes
Impossible things are happening every day!"
Ellan
looked at the Fairy Godfather (for Fairy he was) and smiled. "Oh,
thank you!" he sighed.
"One
more thing," said the Fairy Godfather, "you've got to get
changed a little."
"What's
wrong with my suit?" asked Ellan.
"Well,
if you really want to make a scene, it'll take a little more than
that."
---
Jami
looked around at the ball, all these beautiful women! Maybe the
Prince wouldn't be the only one to find a bride... She and Lila were
waiting in a long line of young women waiting to dance with the
Prince. Many of them would dance with the Prince for a minute or two,
a few went as far as five minutes, before he sent them to one of the
gentlemen waiting to dance with the ladies.
Lady
Belda had been instructed to go ahead and dance with the gentlemen,
and in a few moments, she found herself dancing with Roderick.
"Oh,
what a shame," she sighed as she danced. "Ellan wanted to
come and I thought he wasn't wanted. Well, hopefully there'll be
other times that we can indulge him. He works so hard."
The
line moved as a nice, leisurely pace, but soon the Prince was dancing
with the last young woman. He appeared bored and was about to go sit
with his parents, when a trumpet sounded.
"A
late arrival!" called the page.
Everyone
looked up as a young woman entered and walked down the grand
staircase. She was tall, and seemed a little thickly built. She had
flowing auburn hair and dark hazel eyes. She wore a shimmering
silvery-blue gown that flowed neatly from her waist and on her feet
were crystal slippers.
She
walked stepped onto the dance floor and the Prince walked up with her
and they began dancing gracefully.
"She's
beautiful," sighed Lady Belda. "I think the Prince likes
her."
She
watched a little longer before commenting, "She looks familiar."
"I
know," said Lila, "but I can't place her."
Jami
watched and a thought struck her. "Oh... my..." she
chuckled.
"Do
you know who she is?" asked Lady Belda.
"No,"
grinned Jami. "Never seen her before!"
Five
minutes passed. A few of the girls who the Prince had passed over
watched him continue dancing with this mystery woman. Some of them
began to sing.
"Why would a fellow want a girl like her
A frail and fluffy beauty
Why can't a fellow ever once prefer a solid girl like me?
"She's a frothy little bubble with a flimsy kind of charm
And with very little trouble I could break her little arm.
"Oh, oh why would a fellow want a girl like her
So obviously unusual
Why can't a fellow ever once prefer a usual girl like me?
"Her cheeks are a pretty shade of pink, but not any pinker
than roses
Her skin may be delicate and soft, but not any softer than a doe's
is
"Her neck is no whiter than a swan's
She's only as dainty as a daisy
She's only as graceful as a bird!
So why is the fellow going crazy?
"Oh why would a fellow want a girl like her,
A girl who's merely lovely,
Why can't a fellow ever once prefer a girl who's merely me?
"What's the matter with the man,
What's the matter with the man,
What's the matter with the man?"
If
the Prince or the mystery woman heard this, they ignored it. The
Prince began to sing.
"Ten minutes ago, I saw you
I looked up when you came through the door
My head started reeling, you gave me the feeling
The room had no ceiling or floor.
"Ten minutes ago, I met you,
And we murmured our how do you dos
I wanted to ring out the bells and fling out my arms
And sing out the news.
"I have found her, she's an angel,
With the dust of the stars in her eyes.
We are dancing, we are flying,
And she's taking me back to the skies!
"In the arms of my love, I'm flying,
Over mountain and meadow and glen.
"And I like it so well that for all I can tell
I may never come down again.
I may never come down to earth again!"
The
mystery woman smiled and she and the Prince left for the palace
gardens. The other women went back to dancing. Some of them sat down,
some had refreshments, and a few decided to go home. Lila danced with
Roderick, but Jami went to have a seat.
Jami
smiled to herself and another young woman sat down beside her. "You
seem to be having a good time," the stranger noted.
"Well,
I just came to have fun," Jami replied. "I didn't want to
marry the Prince."
The
other woman laughed. "Me neither! It's most certainly not what I
want."
Jami
looked at her. "Well... what do you want?"
The
woman smiled at her. "I'd like to... well... talk with you, to
be honest."
Jami
smiled at her. "All right. We can do that. I'm Jami."
The
woman sat closer to her. "Rose," she replied.
"Haven't
I seen you before?" asked the Prince.
"You
may have," said the woman in a soft voice. "I'm very busy
in the market."
"That
must have been it," he shrugged. "So, what's your name?"
"El...
Ella," she said shyly.
"Tell
me more about yourself."
Ella
looked at the town's clock tower that was clearly visible from the
palace garden.
"Well,
my parents died some time ago," she said, still in that soft
voice. "But I'm all right now. My father married again and I
live very happily with his second wife and her daughters."
The
Prince nodded.
"I
wasn't sure if I would really meet anyone I'd want to meet tonight,
but that was before you came in."
He
began to sing again.
"Do I love you because you're beautiful,
Or are you beautiful because I love you?
Am I making believe I see in you
A girl too lovely to be really true?
"Do I want you because you're wonderful,
Or are you wonderful because I want you?
Are you the sweet invention of a lover's dream
Or are you really as beautiful as you seem?"
Ella
sang softly.
"Am I making believe I see in you
A man too perfect to be really true?
Do I want you because you're wonderful,
Or are you wonderful because I want you?
Are you the sweet invention of a lover's dream
Or are you really as wonderful as you seem?"
They
embraced quietly. Just then, Ella noticed the clock again. It was
nearly midnight.
"Oh
no, I have to go!" she said.
"You
can stay!" the Prince said. "I promise, whatever it is,
I'll be fine with it."
"No,
I mean, I have to leave or else!" Ella nearly shrieked. "You
can't see me ever again!"
"But
I love you!" said the Prince.
Ella
burst into tears and ran away. The prince went after her, but she had
a head start. In a few moments, she had boarded her golden carriage
and had driven away into the moonlight.
The
Prince sat dejectedly on the steps before noticing that beside him
was one of Ella's crystal slippers. It had obviously fallen off
during her flight. He picked it up and thought carefully about how he
might find this mysterious Ella once more.
---
Lady
Belda and her daughters came home to find Ellan waiting for them. It
was after two o'clock in the morning, but Ellan seemed energetic
still and had tea waiting for them.
"How
are you still awake?" chuckled Jami. "I would have thought
you'd be exhausted."
"I
was too excited to hear about how you all met the Prince," he
replied with a smile as he handed the teacups around.
"Well,
yes, we met the Prince," admitted Lila, "but he didn't
spend much time with us."
"Oh,
and I must apologize, Ellan," said Lady Belda. "It turned
out you would have been welcome, after all."
"That's
all right," he grinned. "I can imagine what it would have
been like anyway."
He
began to sing.
"When you're driving through the moonlight on a highway
When through the moonlight to a dance you are breathless
With a wild anticipation of adventure and excitement and romance
Then at last you see the towers of the palace silouetted
On the sky above the park and below them is a row of lighted
windows
Like a lovely diamond necklace in the dark."
"It
looks that way," chimed in Lady Belda, "the way you
say, he talks as if he knows."
"I do not know these things are so; I only just suppose
I suppose that when you come into the ballroom
And the room itself is floating on the air
If you're suddenly confronted by his highness
You are frozen like a statue on the stair.
"You're afraid he'll hear the way your heart is beating
And you know you musn't make the first advance.
You are seriously thinking of retreating
Then you seem to hear him asking you to dance
You make a bow, a timid bow, and shyly answer yes."
"How
would you know that this is so?" asked Lila.
"I
do no more than guess," replied her stepbrother.
Jami
beamed at her stepbrother and began to sing.
"A lovely night,
A lovely night,
A finer night you know you'll never see.
You meet your prince,
A charming prince
As charming as a prince will ever be.
"The stars in the hazy heaven
Tremble above you
While he is whispering
'Darling, I love you.'
"You say goodbye,
Away you fly
But on your lips you'll keep a kiss
All your life you'll dream of this
Lovely, lovely night."
Ellan
smiled at her.
"Did
you have a good time?"
"She
fell in love!" laughed Lila. "With a girl named Rose!"
"And
what's the consensus on that?" asked Ellan.
"Well,"
said Lady Belda. "I must admit, it wasn't what I expected, but
if my daughter is happy, then I suppose I have no reason to
disapprove."
Ellan
smiled as the girls finished their tea.
"Now,
we'd better hurry to bed," Lady Belda went on, "or we won't
be able to make it to the market in the morning!"
Ellan
and his stepsisters were a little late getting to the market the next
day, but business appeared to be continuing as usual.
Suddenly,
horses began galloping through the marketplace, followed by the Page
calling, "Make way! Make way for the Prince!"
Everyone
cleared the street and bowed. The Prince rode in with the Page, who
was carrying a small bundle.
"By
order of the Prince, every woman in the marketplace will try on this
slipper!"
Everyone
stood and looked at the Page pulling the crystal slipper from the
bundle. Ellan whistled.
"Well,
you better get on with business, Ellan," remarked Lila. "We'll
go ahead and wait for the Prince to get to us."
"I
don't have a lot of business to tend to today," Ellan replied.
"I can wait."
"That's
a good idea," commented Jami, smiling at her stepbrother.
Ellan
and Jami watched anxiously as the Page and the Prince went to every
woman in the marketplace and had her try the slipper. It seemed to be
just a little too big for any of them. Some had long enough feet, but
their feet were too thin. Frustratingly, the Prince and the Page came
to their booth last.
Lila
tried the slipper first and her foot was just a little too small.
Jami was much the same story.
"Well,"
sighed the Prince, "I guess she's not here."
"Perhaps
she had to sleep in, sire?" asked the Page.
"Maybe
you should try my stepbrother!" suggested Jami, pushing Ellan
forward.
"Jami,
don't make fun of the Prince!" groaned Lila.
The
Prince chuckled, but then he looked at Ellan, who bit his lip.
"Shall
we go, sire?" asked the Page.
"No,"
the Prince replied. "Try the slipper on him."
Ellan
removed his boot and the Page held the slipper for him to try. Taking
a deep breath, Ellan closed his eyes and slid his foot into the
slipper.
"Impossible things are happening everyday..."
Ellan
opened his eyes and saw his Fairy Godfather standing behind the
Prince, smiling.
"It
fits!" cheered the Prince.
Ellan
looked down and saw his foot fitting neatly in the slipper. Lila, the
Page and nearly everyone else in the marketplace looked at Ellan in
surprise. Rose—who happened to be in the marketplace—ran towards
Jami and held her hand as she watched.
The
Fairy Godfather raised his hand and Ellan's clothes turned into a
fine glowing silver suit with leather shoes with crystal studded
buckles.
The
Prince stepped forward and reached his hand for Ellan.
"It
was you," he said quietly. "You were the mysterious woman I
danced with. I recognized your eyes."
Ellan
smiled. "It was my Fairy Godfather's idea," he replied. The
Prince turned to the Fairy Godfather who crossed his arms with a big
smile as his wings appeared.
"It
worked, didn't it?" the Fairy Godfather commented.
"And
you love him anyway?" asked Lila.
"Why
not?" asked Jami.
Ellan
and the Prince laughed and looking at each other, they kissed. The
Fairy Godfather raised his hands and sang as Rose and Jami also held
hands and kissed.
"Someone wants you
You know who
Now you're living
There's music in you
"Now you'll hear
Something new
Someone's playing
The music in you
"Now you're living
You know why
Now there's nothing
You won't try
"Move a mountain
Light the sky
Make a wish come true
There is music in you
"Now you can go where ever you want to go
Now you can do whatever you want to do
Now you can be whatever you want to be
And love is a song you will sing your whole life through
"Move a mountain
Light the sky
Make a wish come true
There is music in you!"
So,
Ellan and the Prince went on to get to know each other better. Lila
and Roderick also developed their relationship, as did Jami and Rose.
In time, all three couples married. Lady Belda was given a suite in
the Royal Palace and Roderick, Lila, Jami and Rose all were given
positions in the court.
"Perhaps,"
Lady Belda would often say, "things don't turn out as I think,
but all I really wanted was for my daughters and stepson to be happy,
and now they are. Perhaps the odds of that happening were impossible,
but as Ellan's godfather would say, 'Impossible things are happening
everyday!'"
The idea of writing a genderswapped Cinderella came when I went to see the new Disney film earlier this year. I decided to reivist the Rodgers and Hammerstein version starring Brandy shortly after, which I hadn't seen since it firist aired in 1997. I then checked out the other TV versions, and then I began to get the idea to write the story using the songs from that musical. (So yes, all songs copyright R&H.)
My main inspiration came from the original 1957 version starring Julie Andrews (you can definitely tell with the Godfather's entrance), with secondary from the 1997 version. But my biggest inspiration came from my friend Hannah Byram, who suggested that I not only genderswap Cinderella, but also the Fairy Godmother, who would be played by John Barrowman. She helped me figure out who could play each character and while talking to her, I thought about what making the main character a male would entail.
Since Ellan (a male version of "Ella," Cinderella's real name in many versions) is a male, he would not initially be perceived as a rival for his stepsisters' possible romantic future. I initially decided that both stepsisters would have their independent romantic interests, but then realized that it might be more fun to make one also attracted to people of the same sex (Ellan and Jami could be homosexual, bisexual or pansexual and just mainly feeling same-sex attraction at the time). I decided to have this fairy tale world follow some old fashioned rules with the whole idea of "the man of the house" rules, but would have little trouble accepting same-sex relationships. (That was Hannah's idea. She said there was enough homophobia in the real world without inserting it in our fairy tales.) The whole idea of Ellan attending the ball in drag was there from the start.
Anyways, hope you enjoyed the story!
The idea of writing a genderswapped Cinderella came when I went to see the new Disney film earlier this year. I decided to reivist the Rodgers and Hammerstein version starring Brandy shortly after, which I hadn't seen since it firist aired in 1997. I then checked out the other TV versions, and then I began to get the idea to write the story using the songs from that musical. (So yes, all songs copyright R&H.)
My main inspiration came from the original 1957 version starring Julie Andrews (you can definitely tell with the Godfather's entrance), with secondary from the 1997 version. But my biggest inspiration came from my friend Hannah Byram, who suggested that I not only genderswap Cinderella, but also the Fairy Godmother, who would be played by John Barrowman. She helped me figure out who could play each character and while talking to her, I thought about what making the main character a male would entail.
Since Ellan (a male version of "Ella," Cinderella's real name in many versions) is a male, he would not initially be perceived as a rival for his stepsisters' possible romantic future. I initially decided that both stepsisters would have their independent romantic interests, but then realized that it might be more fun to make one also attracted to people of the same sex (Ellan and Jami could be homosexual, bisexual or pansexual and just mainly feeling same-sex attraction at the time). I decided to have this fairy tale world follow some old fashioned rules with the whole idea of "the man of the house" rules, but would have little trouble accepting same-sex relationships. (That was Hannah's idea. She said there was enough homophobia in the real world without inserting it in our fairy tales.) The whole idea of Ellan attending the ball in drag was there from the start.
Anyways, hope you enjoyed the story!
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