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Sleeping Beauty

Sleeping Beauty (French: La belle au bois dormant, or The Beauty in the Sleeping Forest; German: Dornröschen, or Little Briar Rose), also titled in English as The Sleeping Beauty in the Woods, is a fairy tale about a princess cursed by an evil fairy to sleep for a hundred years before being awakened by a handsome prince. A good fairy, knowing the princess would be frightened if alone when she wakes, uses her wand to put every living person and animal in the palace and forest asleep, to waken when the princess does.[1]

The Sleeping Beauty
The prince finds the Sleeping Beauty, in deep slumber amidst the bushes.
Folk tale
NameThe Sleeping Beauty
Also known asLa Belle au bois dormant (The Sleeping Beauty in the Woods); Dornröschen (Little Briar Rose)
Aarne–Thompson groupingATU 410 (Sleeping Beauty)
RegionFrance (1528)
Published inPerceforest (1528)
Pentamerone (1634), by Giambattista Basile
Histoires ou contes du temps passé (1697), by Charles Perrault
RelatedSun, Moon and Talia

The earliest known version of the tale is found in the narrative Perceforest, written between 1330 and 1344. Another was published by Giambattista Basile in his collection titled The Pentamerone, published posthumously in 1634[2] and adapted by Charles Perrault in Histoires ou contes du temps passé in 1697. The version collected and printed by the Brothers Grimm was one orally transmitted from the Perrault.[3]

The Aarne-Thompson classification system for fairy tales lists Sleeping Beauty as a Type 410: it includes a princess who is magically forced into sleep and later woken, reversing the magic.[4] The fairy tale has been adapted countless times throughout history and retold by modern storytellers across a variety of media.

Origin

Early contributions to the tale include the medieval courtly romance Perceforest (published in 1528).[5] In this tale, a princess named Zellandine falls in love with a man named Troylus. Her father sends him to perform tasks to prove himself worthy of her, and while he is gone, Zellandine falls into an enchanted sleep. Troylus finds her and rapes her in her sleep; when their child is born, the child draws from her finger the flax that caused her sleep. She realizes from the ring Troylus left her that he was the father, and Troylus later returns to marry her.[6] Another early literary predecessor is the Provençal versified novel Fraire de Joi e sor de Plaser [ca] (c. 1320-1340).[7][8]

The second part of the Sleeping Beauty tale, in which the princess and her children are almost put to death but instead are hidden, may have been influenced by Genevieve of Brabant.[9] Even earlier influences come from the story of the sleeping Brynhild in the Volsunga saga and the tribulations of saintly female martyrs in early Christian hagiography conventions. Following these early renditions, the tale was first published by Italian poet Giambattista Basile who lived from 1575 to 1632.

Plot

 
An older image of the sleeping princess: Brünnhilde, surrounded by magical fire rather than roses (illustration by Arthur Rackham to Richard Wagner's Die Walküre)

The folktale begins with a princess whose parents are told by a wicked fairy that their daughter will die when she pricks her finger on a particular item. In Basile's version, the princess pricks her finger on a piece of flax. In Perrault's and the Grimm Brothers' versions, the item is a spindle. The parents rid the kingdom of these items in the hopes of protecting their daughter, but the prophecy is fulfilled regardless. Instead of dying, as was foretold, the princess falls into a deep sleep. After some time, she is found by a prince and is awakened. In Giambattista Basile's version of Sleeping Beauty, Sun, Moon, and Talia, the sleeping beauty, Talia, falls into a deep sleep after getting a splinter of flax in her finger. She is discovered in her castle by a wandering king, who "carrie[s] her to a bed, where he gather[s] the first fruits of love."[10] He leaves her there and she later gives birth to twins.[11]

According to Maria Tatar, there are versions of the story that include a second part to the narrative that details the couple's troubles after their union; some folklorists believe the two parts were originally separate tales.[12]

The second part begins after the prince and princess have had children. Through the course of the tale, the princess and her children are introduced in some way to another woman from the prince's life. This other woman is not fond of the prince's new family, and calls a cook to kill the children and serve them for dinner. Instead of obeying, the cook hides the children and serves livestock. Next, the other woman orders the cook to kill the princess. Before this can happen, the other woman's true nature is revealed to the prince and then she is subjected to the very death that she had planned for the princess. The princess, prince, and their children live happily ever after.[13]

Basile's narrative

 
Sleeping Beauty, by Henry Meynell Rheam, 1899

In Giambattista Basile's dark version of Sleeping Beauty, Sun, Moon, and Talia, the sleeping beauty is named Talia. By asking wise men and astrologers to predict her future after her birth, her father who is a great Lord learns that Talia will be in danger from a splinter of flax. The splinter later causes what appears to be Talia's death; however, it is later learned that it is a long, deep sleep. After Talia falls into deep sleep, she is seated on a velvet throne and her father, to forget his misery of what he thinks is her death, closes the doors and abandons the house forever. One day, while a king is walking by, one of his falcons flies into the house. The king knocks, hoping to be let in by someone, but no one answers and he decides to climb in with a ladder. He finds Talia alive but unconscious, and "...gathers the first fruits of love."[14] Afterwards, he leaves her in the bed and goes back to his kingdom. Though Talia is unconscious, she gives birth to twins — one of whom keeps sucking her fingers. Talia awakens because the twin has sucked out the flax that was stuck deep in Talia's finger. When she wakes up, she discovers that she is a mother and has no idea what happened to her. One day, the king decides he wants to go see Talia again. He goes back to the palace to find her awake and a mother to his twins. He informs her of who he is, what has happened, and they end up bonding. After a few days, the king has to leave to go back to his realm, but promises Talia that he will return to take her to his kingdom.

When he arrives back in his kingdom, his wife hears him saying "Talia, Sun, and Moon" in his sleep. She bribes and threatens the king's secretary to tell her what is going on. After the queen learns the truth, she pretends she is the king and writes to Talia asking her to send the twins because he wants to see them. Talia sends her twins to the "king" and the queen tells the cook to kill the twins and make dishes out of them. She wants to feed the king his children; instead, the cook takes the twins to his wife and hides them. He then cooks two lambs and serves them as if they were the twins. Every time the king mentions how good the food is, the queen replies, "Eat, eat, you are eating of your own." Later, the queen invites Talia to the kingdom and is going to burn her alive, but the king appears and finds out what's going on with his children and Talia. He then orders that his wife be burned along with those who betrayed him. Since the cook actually did not obey the queen, the king thanks the cook for saving his children by giving him rewards. The story ends with the king marrying Talia and living happily ever after.[10]

Perrault's narrative

 
Sleeping Beauty is shown a spindle by the old woman. Sleeping Beauty, by Alexander Zick (1845–1907)

Perrault's narrative is written in two parts, which some folklorists believe were originally separate tales, as they were in the Brothers Grimm's version, and were later joined together by Giambattista Basile and once more by Perrault.[12] According to folklore editors Martin Hallett and Barbara Karasek, Perrault's tale is a much more subtle and pared down version than Basile's story in terms of the more immoral details. An example of this is depicted in Perrault's tale by the prince's choice to instigate no physical interaction with the sleeping princess when the prince discovers her.[2]

At the christening of a king and queen's long-wished-for child, seven good fairies are invited to be godmothers to the infant princess. The fairies attend the banquet at the palace. Each fairy is presented with a golden plate and drinking cups adorned with jewels. Soon after, an old fairy enters the palace and is seated with a plate of fine china and a crystal drinking glass. This old fairy is overlooked because she has been within a tower for many years and everyone had believed her to be deceased. Six of the other seven fairies then offer their gifts of beauty, wit, grace, dance, song, and goodness to the infant princess. The evil fairy is very angry about having been forgotten, and as her gift, curses the infant princess so that she will one day prick her finger on a spindle of a spinning wheel and die. The seventh fairy, who has not yet given her gift, attempts to reverse the evil fairy's curse. However, she can only do so partially. Instead of dying, the Princess will fall into a deep sleep for 100 years and be awakened by a king's son ("elle tombera seulement dans un profond sommeil qui durera cent ans, au bout desquels le fils d’un Roi viendra la réveiller"). This is her gift of protection.

The King orders that every spindle and spinning wheel in the kingdom be destroyed, to try to save his daughter from the terrible curse. Fifteen or sixteen years pass and one day, when the king and queen are away, the Princess wanders through the palace rooms and comes upon an old woman (implied to be the evil fairy in disguise), spinning with her spindle. The princess, who has never seen anyone spin before, asks the old woman if she can try the spinning wheel. The curse is fulfilled as the princess pricks her finger on the spindle and instantly falls into a deep sleep. The old woman cries for help and attempts are made to revive the princess. The king attributes this to fate and has the Princess carried to the finest room in the palace and placed upon a bed of gold and silver embroidered fabric. The king and queen kiss their daughter goodbye and depart, proclaiming the entrance to be forbidden. The good fairy who altered the evil prophecy is summoned. Having great powers of foresight, the fairy sees that the Princess will awaken to distress when she finds herself alone, so the fairy puts everyone in the castle to sleep. The fairy also summons a forest of trees, brambles and thorns that spring up around the castle, shielding it from the outside world and preventing anyone from disturbing the Princess.

A hundred years pass and a prince from another family spies the hidden castle during a hunting expedition. His attendants tell him differing stories regarding the castle until an old man recounts his father's words: within the castle lies a beautiful princess who is doomed to sleep for a hundred years until a king's son comes and awakens her. The prince then braves the tall trees, brambles and thorns which part at his approach, and enters the castle. He passes the sleeping castle folk and comes across the chamber where the Princess lies asleep on the bed. Struck by the radiant beauty before him, he falls on his knees before her. The enchantment comes to an end, the princess awakens and bestows upon the prince a look “more tender than a first glance might seem to warrant” (in Perrault's original French tale, the prince does not kiss the princess to wake her up) then converses with the prince for a long time. Meanwhile, the rest of the castle awakens and go about their business. The prince and princess are later married by the chaplain in the castle chapel.

After wedding the Princess in secret, the Prince continues to visit her and she bears him two children, Aurore (Dawn) and Jour (Day), unbeknownst to his mother, who is of an ogre lineage. When the time comes for the Prince to ascend the throne, he brings his wife, children, and the talabutte ("Count of the Mount").

The Ogress Queen Mother sends the young Queen and the children to a house secluded in the woods and directs her cook to prepare the boy with Sauce Robert for dinner. The kind-hearted cook substitutes a lamb for the boy, which satisfies the Queen Mother. She then demands the girl but the cook this time substitutes a kid, which also satisfies the Queen Mother. When the Ogress demands that he serve up the young Queen, the latter offers to slit her throat so that she may join the children that she imagines are dead. While the Queen Mother is satisfied with a hind prepared with Sauce Robert in place of the young Queen, there is a tearful secret reunion of the Queen and her children. However, the Queen Mother soon discovers the cook's trick and she prepares a tub in the courtyard filled with vipers and other noxious creatures. The King returns in the nick of time and the Ogress, her true nature having been exposed, throws herself into the tub and is fully consumed. The King, young Queen, and children then live happily ever after.

Grimm Brothers' version

 
Sleeping Beauty and the palace dwellers under a century-long sleep enchantment (The Sleeping Beauty by Sir Edward Burne-Jones).

The Brothers Grimm included a variant of Sleeping Beauty, Little Briar Rose, in their collection (1812).[15] Their version ends when the prince arrives to wake Sleeping Beauty (named Rosamund) and does not include the part two as found in Basile's and Perrault's versions.[16] The brothers considered rejecting the story on the grounds that it was derived from Perrault's version, but the presence of the Brynhild tale convinced them to include it as an authentically German tale. Their decision was notable because in none of the Teutonic myths, meaning the Poetic and Prose Eddas or Volsunga Saga, are their sleepers awakened with a kiss, a fact Jacob Grimm would have known since he wrote an encyclopedic volume on German mythology. His version is the only known German variant of the tale, and Perrault's influence is almost certain.[17] In the original Brothers Grimm's version, the fairies are instead wise women.[18]

The Brothers Grimm also included, in the first edition of their tales, a fragmentary fairy tale, "The Evil Mother-in-law". This story begins with the heroine, a married mother of two children, and her mother-in-law who attempts to eat her and the children. The heroine suggests an animal be substituted in the dish, and the story ends with the heroine's worry that she cannot keep her children from crying and getting the mother-in-law's attention. Like many German tales showing French influence, it appeared in no subsequent edition.[19]

Variations

 
He stands—he stoops to gaze—he kneels—he wakes her with a kiss, woodcut by Walter Crane

The princess's name has varied from one adaptation to the other. In Sun, Moon, and Talia, she is named Talia (Sun and Moon being her twin children). She has no name in Perrault's story but her daughter is called "Aurore". The Brothers Grimm named her "Briar Rose" in their 1812 collection.[15] However, some translations of the Grimms' tale give the princess the name "Rosamond". Tchaikovsky's ballet and Disney's version named her Princess Aurora; however, in the Disney version, she is also called "Briar Rose" in her childhood, when she is being raised incognito by the good fairies.[20]

Besides Sun, Moon, and Talia, Basile included another variant of this Aarne-Thompson type, The Young Slave, in his book, The Pentamerone. The Grimms also included a second, more distantly related one titled The Glass Coffin.[21]

Italo Calvino included a variant in Italian Folktales. In his version, the cause of the princess's sleep is a wish by her mother. As in Pentamerone, the prince rapes her in her sleep and her children are born. Calvino retains the element that the woman who tries to kill the children is the king's mother, not his wife, but adds that she does not want to eat them herself, and instead serves them to the king. His version came from Calabria, but he noted that all Italian versions closely followed Basile's.[22][23] In his More English Fairy Tales, Joseph Jacobs noted that the figure of the Sleeping Beauty was in common between this tale and the Romani tale The King of England and his Three Sons.[24]

The hostility of the king's mother to his new bride is repeated in the fairy tale The Six Swans,[25] and also features in The Twelve Wild Ducks, where the mother is modified to be the king's stepmother. However, these tales omit the attempted cannibalism.

Russian Romantic writer Vasily Zhukovsky wrote a versified work based on the theme of the princess cursed into a long sleep in his poem "Спящая царевна" ("The Sleeping Tsarevna" [ru]), published in 1832.[26]


Interpretations

According to Maria Tatar, the Sleeping Beauty tale has been disparaged by modern-day feminists who consider the protagonist to have no agency and find her passivity to be offensive; some feminists have even argued for people to stop telling the story altogether.[27]

Disney has received criticism for depicting both Cinderella and the Sleeping Beauty princess as "naïve and malleable" characters.[28] Time Out dismissed the princess as a "delicate" and "vapid" character.[29] Sonia Saraiya of Jezebel echoed this sentiment, criticizing the princess for lacking "interesting qualities", where she also ranked her as Disney's least feminist princess.[30] Similarly, Bustle also ranked the princess as the least feminist Disney Princess, with author Chelsea Mize expounding, "Aurora literally sleeps for like three quarters of the movie ... Aurora just straight-up has no agency, and really isn't doing much in the way of feminine progress."[31] Leigh Butler of Tor.com went on to defend the character writing, "Aurora’s cipher-ness in Sleeping Beauty would be infuriating if she were the only female character in it, but the presence of the Fairies and Maleficent allow her to be what she is without it being a subconscious statement on what all women are."[32] Similarly, Refinery29 ranked Princess Aurora the fourth most feminist Disney Princess because, "Her aunts have essentially raised her in a place where women run the game."[33] Despite being featured prominently in Disney merchandise, "Aurora has become an oft-forgotten princess", and her popularity pales in comparison to those of Cinderella and Snow White.[34]

An example of the cosmic interpretation of the tale given by the nineteenth century solar mythologist school[35] appears in John Fiske's Myths and Myth-Makers: “It is perhaps less obvious that winter should be so frequently symbolized as a thorn or sharp instrument... Sigurd is slain by a thorn, and Balder by a sharp sprig of mistletoe; and in the myth of the Sleeping Beauty, the earth-goddess sinks into her long winter sleep when pricked by the point of the spindle. In her cosmic palace, all is locked in icy repose, naught thriving save the ivy which defies the cold, until the kiss of the golden-haired sun-god reawakens life and activity.”[36]

Media

"Sleeping Beauty" has been popular for many fairytale fantasy retellings. Some examples are listed below:

In film and television

In literature

 
Illustration to Tennyson's 1830 poem, Sleeping Beauty
  • Sleeping Beauty (1830) and The Day-Dream (1842), two poems based on Sleeping Beauty by Alfred, Lord Tennyson.[62]
  • The Rose and the Ring (1854), a satirical fantasy by William Makepeace Thackeray.
  • The Sleeping Beauty (1919), a poem by Mary Carolyn Davies about a failed hero who did not waken the princess, but died in the enchanted briars surrounding her palace.[63]
  • The Sleeping Beauty (1920), a retelling of the fairy tale by Charles Evans, with illustrations by Arthur Rackham.[64]
  • Briar Rose (Sleeping Beauty) (1971), a poem by Anne Sexton in her collection Transformations (1971), in which she re-envisions sixteen of the Grimm's Fairy Tales.[65]
  • The Sleeping Beauty Quartet (1983-2015), four erotic novels written by Anne Rice under the pen name A.N. Roquelaure, set in a medieval fantasy world and loosely based on the fairy tale.[66]
  • Beauty (1992), a novel by Sheri S. Tepper.[67]
  • Briar Rose (1992), a novel by Jane Yolen.[68]
  • Enchantment (1999), a novel by Orson Scott Card based on the Russian version of Sleeping Beauty.
  • Spindle's End (2000), a novel by Robin McKinley.[69]
  • Clementine (2001), a novel by Sophie Masson.[70]
  • A Kiss in Time (2009), a novel by Alex Flinn.[71]
  • The Sleeper and the Spindle (2012), a novel by Neil Gaiman.[72]
  • The Gates of Sleep (2012), a novel by Mercedes Lackey from the Elemental Masters series set in Edwardian England.[73]
  • Sleeping Beauty: The One Who Took the Really Long Nap (2018), a novel by Wendy Mass and the second book in the Twice Upon a Time series features a princess named Rose who pricks her finger and falls asleep for 100 years.[74]
  • The Sleepless Beauty (2019), a novel by Rajesh Talwar setting the story in a small kingdom in the Himalayas.[75]
  • Lava Red Feather Blue (2021), a novel by Molly Ringle involving a male/male twist on the Sleeping Beauty story.
  • Malice (2021), a novel by Heather Walter told by the Maleficent character's (Alyce's) POV and involving a woman/woman love story. [76]
  • Misrule (2022), a novel by Heather Walter and sequel to Malice. [77]

In music

 
The Sleeping Beauty, ballet Emily Smith

In video games

In art

See also

References

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  3. ^ Bottigheimer, Ruth. (2008). "Before Contes du temps passe (1697): Charles Perrault's Griselidis, Souhaits and Peau". The Romantic Review, Volume 99, Number 3. pp. 175–189.
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  6. ^ Jack Zipes, The Great Fairy Tale Tradition: From Straparola and Basile to the Brothers Grimm, p 648, ISBN 0-393-97636-X.
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  8. ^ Frayre de Joy e Sor de Plaser. Bibilothèque nationale de France.
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  14. ^ "Sleeping Beauty".
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  61. ^ "Maleficent: Mistress of Evil (2019)". IMDb. 20 Oct 2019. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
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Further reading

External links

  • The complete set of Grimms' Fairy Tales, including Sleeping Beauty at Standard Ebooks
  • Sleeping beauty in the woods, by Perrault, 1870 illustrated scanned book via Internet Archive
  • The Stalk of Flax adapted by Amy Friedman and Meredith Johnson
  •   The Sleeping Beauty. A painting by John Wood, engraved by F. Bacon and with a poetical illustration by Letitia Elizabeth Landon in the Forget Me Not annual, 1837.
  •   Texts on Wikisource:

sleeping, beauty, other, uses, disambiguation, french, belle, bois, dormant, beauty, sleeping, forest, german, dornröschen, little, briar, rose, also, titled, english, woods, fairy, tale, about, princess, cursed, evil, fairy, sleep, hundred, years, before, bei. For other uses see Sleeping Beauty disambiguation Sleeping Beauty French La belle au bois dormant or The Beauty in the Sleeping Forest German Dornroschen or Little Briar Rose also titled in English as The Sleeping Beauty in the Woods is a fairy tale about a princess cursed by an evil fairy to sleep for a hundred years before being awakened by a handsome prince A good fairy knowing the princess would be frightened if alone when she wakes uses her wand to put every living person and animal in the palace and forest asleep to waken when the princess does 1 The Sleeping BeautyThe prince finds the Sleeping Beauty in deep slumber amidst the bushes Folk taleNameThe Sleeping BeautyAlso known asLa Belle au bois dormant The Sleeping Beauty in the Woods Dornroschen Little Briar Rose Aarne Thompson groupingATU 410 Sleeping Beauty RegionFrance 1528 Published inPerceforest 1528 Pentamerone 1634 by Giambattista BasileHistoires ou contes du temps passe 1697 by Charles PerraultRelatedSun Moon and TaliaThe earliest known version of the tale is found in the narrative Perceforest written between 1330 and 1344 Another was published by Giambattista Basile in his collection titled The Pentamerone published posthumously in 1634 2 and adapted by Charles Perrault in Histoires ou contes du temps passe in 1697 The version collected and printed by the Brothers Grimm was one orally transmitted from the Perrault 3 The Aarne Thompson classification system for fairy tales lists Sleeping Beauty as a Type 410 it includes a princess who is magically forced into sleep and later woken reversing the magic 4 The fairy tale has been adapted countless times throughout history and retold by modern storytellers across a variety of media Contents 1 Origin 2 Plot 2 1 Basile s narrative 2 2 Perrault s narrative 2 3 Grimm Brothers version 2 4 Variations 3 Interpretations 4 Media 4 1 In film and television 4 2 In literature 4 3 In music 4 4 In video games 4 5 In art 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksOrigin EditEarly contributions to the tale include the medieval courtly romance Perceforest published in 1528 5 In this tale a princess named Zellandine falls in love with a man named Troylus Her father sends him to perform tasks to prove himself worthy of her and while he is gone Zellandine falls into an enchanted sleep Troylus finds her and rapes her in her sleep when their child is born the child draws from her finger the flax that caused her sleep She realizes from the ring Troylus left her that he was the father and Troylus later returns to marry her 6 Another early literary predecessor is the Provencal versified novel Fraire de Joi e sor de Plaser ca c 1320 1340 7 8 The second part of the Sleeping Beauty tale in which the princess and her children are almost put to death but instead are hidden may have been influenced by Genevieve of Brabant 9 Even earlier influences come from the story of the sleeping Brynhild in the Volsunga saga and the tribulations of saintly female martyrs in early Christian hagiography conventions Following these early renditions the tale was first published by Italian poet Giambattista Basile who lived from 1575 to 1632 Plot Edit An older image of the sleeping princess Brunnhilde surrounded by magical fire rather than roses illustration by Arthur Rackham to Richard Wagner s Die Walkure The folktale begins with a princess whose parents are told by a wicked fairy that their daughter will die when she pricks her finger on a particular item In Basile s version the princess pricks her finger on a piece of flax In Perrault s and the Grimm Brothers versions the item is a spindle The parents rid the kingdom of these items in the hopes of protecting their daughter but the prophecy is fulfilled regardless Instead of dying as was foretold the princess falls into a deep sleep After some time she is found by a prince and is awakened In Giambattista Basile s version of Sleeping Beauty Sun Moon and Talia the sleeping beauty Talia falls into a deep sleep after getting a splinter of flax in her finger She is discovered in her castle by a wandering king who carrie s her to a bed where he gather s the first fruits of love 10 He leaves her there and she later gives birth to twins 11 According to Maria Tatar there are versions of the story that include a second part to the narrative that details the couple s troubles after their union some folklorists believe the two parts were originally separate tales 12 The second part begins after the prince and princess have had children Through the course of the tale the princess and her children are introduced in some way to another woman from the prince s life This other woman is not fond of the prince s new family and calls a cook to kill the children and serve them for dinner Instead of obeying the cook hides the children and serves livestock Next the other woman orders the cook to kill the princess Before this can happen the other woman s true nature is revealed to the prince and then she is subjected to the very death that she had planned for the princess The princess prince and their children live happily ever after 13 Basile s narrative Edit Sleeping Beauty by Henry Meynell Rheam 1899 In Giambattista Basile s dark version of Sleeping Beauty Sun Moon and Talia the sleeping beauty is named Talia By asking wise men and astrologers to predict her future after her birth her father who is a great Lord learns that Talia will be in danger from a splinter of flax The splinter later causes what appears to be Talia s death however it is later learned that it is a long deep sleep After Talia falls into deep sleep she is seated on a velvet throne and her father to forget his misery of what he thinks is her death closes the doors and abandons the house forever One day while a king is walking by one of his falcons flies into the house The king knocks hoping to be let in by someone but no one answers and he decides to climb in with a ladder He finds Talia alive but unconscious and gathers the first fruits of love 14 Afterwards he leaves her in the bed and goes back to his kingdom Though Talia is unconscious she gives birth to twins one of whom keeps sucking her fingers Talia awakens because the twin has sucked out the flax that was stuck deep in Talia s finger When she wakes up she discovers that she is a mother and has no idea what happened to her One day the king decides he wants to go see Talia again He goes back to the palace to find her awake and a mother to his twins He informs her of who he is what has happened and they end up bonding After a few days the king has to leave to go back to his realm but promises Talia that he will return to take her to his kingdom When he arrives back in his kingdom his wife hears him saying Talia Sun and Moon in his sleep She bribes and threatens the king s secretary to tell her what is going on After the queen learns the truth she pretends she is the king and writes to Talia asking her to send the twins because he wants to see them Talia sends her twins to the king and the queen tells the cook to kill the twins and make dishes out of them She wants to feed the king his children instead the cook takes the twins to his wife and hides them He then cooks two lambs and serves them as if they were the twins Every time the king mentions how good the food is the queen replies Eat eat you are eating of your own Later the queen invites Talia to the kingdom and is going to burn her alive but the king appears and finds out what s going on with his children and Talia He then orders that his wife be burned along with those who betrayed him Since the cook actually did not obey the queen the king thanks the cook for saving his children by giving him rewards The story ends with the king marrying Talia and living happily ever after 10 Perrault s narrative Edit Sleeping Beauty is shown a spindle by the old woman Sleeping Beauty by Alexander Zick 1845 1907 Perrault s narrative is written in two parts which some folklorists believe were originally separate tales as they were in the Brothers Grimm s version and were later joined together by Giambattista Basile and once more by Perrault 12 According to folklore editors Martin Hallett and Barbara Karasek Perrault s tale is a much more subtle and pared down version than Basile s story in terms of the more immoral details An example of this is depicted in Perrault s tale by the prince s choice to instigate no physical interaction with the sleeping princess when the prince discovers her 2 At the christening of a king and queen s long wished for child seven good fairies are invited to be godmothers to the infant princess The fairies attend the banquet at the palace Each fairy is presented with a golden plate and drinking cups adorned with jewels Soon after an old fairy enters the palace and is seated with a plate of fine china and a crystal drinking glass This old fairy is overlooked because she has been within a tower for many years and everyone had believed her to be deceased Six of the other seven fairies then offer their gifts of beauty wit grace dance song and goodness to the infant princess The evil fairy is very angry about having been forgotten and as her gift curses the infant princess so that she will one day prick her finger on a spindle of a spinning wheel and die The seventh fairy who has not yet given her gift attempts to reverse the evil fairy s curse However she can only do so partially Instead of dying the Princess will fall into a deep sleep for 100 years and be awakened by a king s son elle tombera seulement dans un profond sommeil qui durera cent ans au bout desquels le fils d un Roi viendra la reveiller This is her gift of protection The King orders that every spindle and spinning wheel in the kingdom be destroyed to try to save his daughter from the terrible curse Fifteen or sixteen years pass and one day when the king and queen are away the Princess wanders through the palace rooms and comes upon an old woman implied to be the evil fairy in disguise spinning with her spindle The princess who has never seen anyone spin before asks the old woman if she can try the spinning wheel The curse is fulfilled as the princess pricks her finger on the spindle and instantly falls into a deep sleep The old woman cries for help and attempts are made to revive the princess The king attributes this to fate and has the Princess carried to the finest room in the palace and placed upon a bed of gold and silver embroidered fabric The king and queen kiss their daughter goodbye and depart proclaiming the entrance to be forbidden The good fairy who altered the evil prophecy is summoned Having great powers of foresight the fairy sees that the Princess will awaken to distress when she finds herself alone so the fairy puts everyone in the castle to sleep The fairy also summons a forest of trees brambles and thorns that spring up around the castle shielding it from the outside world and preventing anyone from disturbing the Princess A hundred years pass and a prince from another family spies the hidden castle during a hunting expedition His attendants tell him differing stories regarding the castle until an old man recounts his father s words within the castle lies a beautiful princess who is doomed to sleep for a hundred years until a king s son comes and awakens her The prince then braves the tall trees brambles and thorns which part at his approach and enters the castle He passes the sleeping castle folk and comes across the chamber where the Princess lies asleep on the bed Struck by the radiant beauty before him he falls on his knees before her The enchantment comes to an end the princess awakens and bestows upon the prince a look more tender than a first glance might seem to warrant in Perrault s original French tale the prince does not kiss the princess to wake her up then converses with the prince for a long time Meanwhile the rest of the castle awakens and go about their business The prince and princess are later married by the chaplain in the castle chapel After wedding the Princess in secret the Prince continues to visit her and she bears him two children Aurore Dawn and Jour Day unbeknownst to his mother who is of an ogre lineage When the time comes for the Prince to ascend the throne he brings his wife children and the talabutte Count of the Mount The Ogress Queen Mother sends the young Queen and the children to a house secluded in the woods and directs her cook to prepare the boy with Sauce Robert for dinner The kind hearted cook substitutes a lamb for the boy which satisfies the Queen Mother She then demands the girl but the cook this time substitutes a kid which also satisfies the Queen Mother When the Ogress demands that he serve up the young Queen the latter offers to slit her throat so that she may join the children that she imagines are dead While the Queen Mother is satisfied with a hind prepared with Sauce Robert in place of the young Queen there is a tearful secret reunion of the Queen and her children However the Queen Mother soon discovers the cook s trick and she prepares a tub in the courtyard filled with vipers and other noxious creatures The King returns in the nick of time and the Ogress her true nature having been exposed throws herself into the tub and is fully consumed The King young Queen and children then live happily ever after Grimm Brothers version Edit Sleeping Beauty and the palace dwellers under a century long sleep enchantment The Sleeping Beauty by Sir Edward Burne Jones The Brothers Grimm included a variant of Sleeping Beauty Little Briar Rose in their collection 1812 15 Their version ends when the prince arrives to wake Sleeping Beauty named Rosamund and does not include the part two as found in Basile s and Perrault s versions 16 The brothers considered rejecting the story on the grounds that it was derived from Perrault s version but the presence of the Brynhild tale convinced them to include it as an authentically German tale Their decision was notable because in none of the Teutonic myths meaning the Poetic and Prose Eddas or Volsunga Saga are their sleepers awakened with a kiss a fact Jacob Grimm would have known since he wrote an encyclopedic volume on German mythology His version is the only known German variant of the tale and Perrault s influence is almost certain 17 In the original Brothers Grimm s version the fairies are instead wise women 18 The Brothers Grimm also included in the first edition of their tales a fragmentary fairy tale The Evil Mother in law This story begins with the heroine a married mother of two children and her mother in law who attempts to eat her and the children The heroine suggests an animal be substituted in the dish and the story ends with the heroine s worry that she cannot keep her children from crying and getting the mother in law s attention Like many German tales showing French influence it appeared in no subsequent edition 19 Variations Edit He stands he stoops to gaze he kneels he wakes her with a kiss woodcut by Walter Crane For the Disney variation of the tale see Sleeping Beauty 1959 film The princess s name has varied from one adaptation to the other In Sun Moon and Talia she is named Talia Sun and Moon being her twin children She has no name in Perrault s story but her daughter is called Aurore The Brothers Grimm named her Briar Rose in their 1812 collection 15 However some translations of the Grimms tale give the princess the name Rosamond Tchaikovsky s ballet and Disney s version named her Princess Aurora however in the Disney version she is also called Briar Rose in her childhood when she is being raised incognito by the good fairies 20 Besides Sun Moon and Talia Basile included another variant of this Aarne Thompson type The Young Slave in his book The Pentamerone The Grimms also included a second more distantly related one titled The Glass Coffin 21 Italo Calvino included a variant in Italian Folktales In his version the cause of the princess s sleep is a wish by her mother As in Pentamerone the prince rapes her in her sleep and her children are born Calvino retains the element that the woman who tries to kill the children is the king s mother not his wife but adds that she does not want to eat them herself and instead serves them to the king His version came from Calabria but he noted that all Italian versions closely followed Basile s 22 23 In his More English Fairy Tales Joseph Jacobs noted that the figure of the Sleeping Beauty was in common between this tale and the Romani tale The King of England and his Three Sons 24 The hostility of the king s mother to his new bride is repeated in the fairy tale The Six Swans 25 and also features in The Twelve Wild Ducks where the mother is modified to be the king s stepmother However these tales omit the attempted cannibalism Russian Romantic writer Vasily Zhukovsky wrote a versified work based on the theme of the princess cursed into a long sleep in his poem Spyashaya carevna The Sleeping Tsarevna ru published in 1832 26 Interpretations EditAccording to Maria Tatar the Sleeping Beauty tale has been disparaged by modern day feminists who consider the protagonist to have no agency and find her passivity to be offensive some feminists have even argued for people to stop telling the story altogether 27 Disney has received criticism for depicting both Cinderella and the Sleeping Beauty princess as naive and malleable characters 28 Time Out dismissed the princess as a delicate and vapid character 29 Sonia Saraiya of Jezebel echoed this sentiment criticizing the princess for lacking interesting qualities where she also ranked her as Disney s least feminist princess 30 Similarly Bustle also ranked the princess as the least feminist Disney Princess with author Chelsea Mize expounding Aurora literally sleeps for like three quarters of the movie Aurora just straight up has no agency and really isn t doing much in the way of feminine progress 31 Leigh Butler of Tor com went on to defend the character writing Aurora s cipher ness in Sleeping Beauty would be infuriating if she were the only female character in it but the presence of the Fairies and Maleficent allow her to be what she is without it being a subconscious statement on what all women are 32 Similarly Refinery29 ranked Princess Aurora the fourth most feminist Disney Princess because Her aunts have essentially raised her in a place where women run the game 33 Despite being featured prominently in Disney merchandise Aurora has become an oft forgotten princess and her popularity pales in comparison to those of Cinderella and Snow White 34 An example of the cosmic interpretation of the tale given by the nineteenth century solar mythologist school 35 appears in John Fiske s Myths and Myth Makers It is perhaps less obvious that winter should be so frequently symbolized as a thorn or sharp instrument Sigurd is slain by a thorn and Balder by a sharp sprig of mistletoe and in the myth of the Sleeping Beauty the earth goddess sinks into her long winter sleep when pricked by the point of the spindle In her cosmic palace all is locked in icy repose naught thriving save the ivy which defies the cold until the kiss of the golden haired sun god reawakens life and activity 36 Media Edit Sleeping Beauty has been popular for many fairytale fantasy retellings Some examples are listed below In film and television Edit The Sleeping Princess 1939 a Walter Lantz Productions animated short parodying the original fairy tale 37 A loose adaptation can be seen in a scene from the propaganda cartoon Education for Death where Sleeping Beauty is a valkyrie representing Nazi Germany and where the prince is replaced with Fuehrer Adolf Hitler in knights armor The short also parodies Richard Wagner s opera Siegfried Prinsessa Ruusunen 1949 a Finnish film directed by Edvin Laine and scored with Erkki Melartin s incidental music from 1912 38 Dornroschen 1955 a West German film directed by Fritz Genschow 39 Sleeping Beauty 1959 a Walt Disney animated film based on both Charles Perrault and the Brother s Grimm s versions Featuring the original voices of Mary Costa as Princess Aurora the Sleeping Beauty and Eleanor Audley as Maleficent 40 Sleeping Beauty Spyashaya krasavica 1964 a filmed version of the ballet produced by the Kirov Ballet along with Lenfilm studios starring Alla Sizova as Princess Aurora 41 Festival of Family Classics 1972 73 episode Sleeping Beauty produced by Rankin Bass and animated by Mushi Production 42 Some Call It Loving also known as Sleeping Beauty 1973 directed by James B Harris and starring Zalman King Carol White Tisa Farrow and Richard Pryor based on a short story by John Collier 43 Manga Sekai Mukashi Banashi 1976 79 10 minute adaptation Jak se budi princezny 1978 a Czechoslovakian film directed by Vaclav Vorlicek 44 World Famous Fairy Tale Series Sekai meisaku dōwa 1975 83 has a 9 minute adaptation later reused in the U S edit of My Favorite Fairy Tales Goldilocks and the Three Bears Rumpelstiltskin Little Red Riding Hood Sleeping Beauty 1984 direct to video featurette by Lee Mendelson Film Productions 45 Sleeping Beauty 1987 a direct to television musical film directed by David Irving 46 The Legend of Sleeping Brittany 1989 an episode of Alvin amp the Chipmunks based on the fairy tale 47 Briar Rose or The Sleeping Beauty 1990 a Japanese Czechoslovakian stop motion animated featurette directed by Kihachiro Kawamoto Britannica s Tales Around the World 1990 91 features three variations of the story 48 An episode of the series Grimm s Fairy Tale Classics is dedicated to Princess Briar Rose 49 A 1986 episode of Brummkreisel had Kunibert Hans Joachim Leschnitz demanding that he and his friends Achim Joachim Kaps Hops and Mops enact the story of Sleeping Beauty Achim first compromises by incorporating Sleeping Beauty into his lesson about days of the week and then finally he allows Kunibert to have his way Hops played the princess Kunibert played the prince Mops played the wicked fairy and Achim played the brambles World Fairy Tale Series Anime sekai no dōwa 1995 anime television anthology produced by Toei Animation has half hour adaptation Sleeping Beauty 1995 a Japanese American direct to video film by Jetlag Productions 50 Wolves Witches and Giants 1995 99 episode Sleeping Beauty season 1 episode 5 Happily Ever After Fairy Tales for Every Child 1995 episode Sleeping Beauty the classic story is told with a Hispanic cast when Rosita is cast into a long sleep by Evelina and later awakened by Prince Luis 51 The Triplets Les tres bessones Las tres mellizas 1997 2003 catalan animated series season 1 episode 19 Simsala Grimm 1999 2010 episode 9 of season 2 Bellas durmientes Sleeping Beauties 2001 directed by Eloy Lozano adapted from the Kawabata novel 52 La belle endormie The Sleeping Beauty 2010 a film by Catherine Breillat 53 Sleeping Beauty 2011 directed by Julia Leigh and starring Emily Browning about a young girl who takes a sleeping potion and lets men have their way with her to earn extra money 54 Once Upon a Time 2011 an ABC TV show starring Sarah Bolger and Julian Morris 55 Sleeping Beauty 2014 a film by Rene Perez 56 Sleeping Beauty 2014 a film by Casper Van Dien 57 Maleficent 2014 a Walt Disney live action reimagining starring Angelina Jolie as Maleficent and Elle Fanning as Princess Aurora 58 Ever After High episode Briar Beauty 2015 an animated Netflix series 59 The Curse of Sleeping Beauty 2016 an American horror film directed by Pearry Reginald Teo 60 Archie Campbell satirized the story with Beeping Sleauty in several Hee Haw television episodes Maleficent Mistress of Evil 2019 a Walt Disney live action sequel to Maleficent 2014 61 Avengers Grimm 2015 portrays an adult Sleeping Beauty with superpowers In literature Edit Illustration to Tennyson s 1830 poem Sleeping Beauty Sleeping Beauty 1830 and The Day Dream 1842 two poems based on Sleeping Beauty by Alfred Lord Tennyson 62 The Rose and the Ring 1854 a satirical fantasy by William Makepeace Thackeray The Sleeping Beauty 1919 a poem by Mary Carolyn Davies about a failed hero who did not waken the princess but died in the enchanted briars surrounding her palace 63 The Sleeping Beauty 1920 a retelling of the fairy tale by Charles Evans with illustrations by Arthur Rackham 64 Briar Rose Sleeping Beauty 1971 a poem by Anne Sexton in her collection Transformations 1971 in which she re envisions sixteen of the Grimm s Fairy Tales 65 The Sleeping Beauty Quartet 1983 2015 four erotic novels written by Anne Rice under the pen name A N Roquelaure set in a medieval fantasy world and loosely based on the fairy tale 66 Beauty 1992 a novel by Sheri S Tepper 67 Briar Rose 1992 a novel by Jane Yolen 68 Enchantment 1999 a novel by Orson Scott Card based on the Russian version of Sleeping Beauty Spindle s End 2000 a novel by Robin McKinley 69 Clementine 2001 a novel by Sophie Masson 70 A Kiss in Time 2009 a novel by Alex Flinn 71 The Sleeper and the Spindle 2012 a novel by Neil Gaiman 72 The Gates of Sleep 2012 a novel by Mercedes Lackey from the Elemental Masters series set in Edwardian England 73 Sleeping Beauty The One Who Took the Really Long Nap 2018 a novel by Wendy Mass and the second book in the Twice Upon a Time series features a princess named Rose who pricks her finger and falls asleep for 100 years 74 The Sleepless Beauty 2019 a novel by Rajesh Talwar setting the story in a small kingdom in the Himalayas 75 Lava Red Feather Blue 2021 a novel by Molly Ringle involving a male male twist on the Sleeping Beauty story Malice 2021 a novel by Heather Walter told by the Maleficent character s Alyce s POV and involving a woman woman love story 76 Misrule 2022 a novel by Heather Walter and sequel to Malice 77 In music Edit The Sleeping Beauty ballet Emily Smith La Belle au Bois Dormant 1825 an opera by Michele Carafa La belle au bois dormant 1829 a ballet in four acts with book by Eugene Scribe composed by Ferdinand Herold and choreographed by Jean Louis Aumer The Sleeping Beauty 1890 a ballet by Tchaikovsky Dornroschen 1902 an opera by Engelbert Humperdinck Pavane de la Belle au bois dormant 1910 the first movement of Ravel s Ma mere l Oye 78 The Sleeping Beauty 1992 song on album Clouds by the Swedish band Tiamat Sleeping Beauty Wakes 2008 an album by the American musical trio GrooveLily 79 There Was A Princess Long Ago a common nursery rhyme or singing game typically sung stood in a circle with actions retells the story of Sleeping Beauty in a summarised song 80 Sleeping Beauty The Musical 2019 a two act musical with book and lyrics by Ian Curran and music by Simon Hanson and Peter Vint 81 Hex 2021 an upcoming musical with book by Tanya Ronder music by Jim Fortune and lyrics by Rufus Norris due to open at the Royal National Theatre in December 2021 In video games Edit Kingdom Hearts is a video game in which Maleficent is one of the main antagonists and Aurora is one of the Princesses of Heart together with the other Disney princesses Little Briar Rose 2019 is a point and click adventure inspired by the Brothers Grimm s version of the fairy tale 82 SINoALICE 2017 is a mobile Gacha game which features Sleeping Beauty as one of the main player controlled characters and features in her own dark story line which follows her unending desire to sleep as well as crossing over with the other fairy tale characters featured in the game Video game series Dark Parables adapted the tale as the plot of its first game Curse of Briar Rose 2010 In art Edit Perrault s La Belle au bois dormant Sleeping Beauty illustration by Gustave Dore Prince Florimund finds the Sleeping Beauty Sleeping Beauty by Jenny Harbour Book cover for a Dutch interpretation of the story by Johann Georg van Caspel Briar Rose Sleeping Beauty by Edward Frederick Brewtnall Louis Sussmann Hellborn 1828 1908 Sleeping Beauty Sleeping Princess by Viktor Vasnetsov Sleeping Beauty statue in Wuppertal GermanySee also Edit Children s literature portal France portalThe Glass Coffin Princess Aubergine Rip Van Winkle Snow White The Sleeping Prince fairy tale References Edit 410 The Sleeping Beauty Multilingual Folk Tale Database Retrieved February 26 2019 a b Hallett Martin Karasek Barbara eds 2009 Folk amp Fairy Tales 4 ed Broadview Press pp 63 67 ISBN 978 1 55111 898 7 Bottigheimer Ruth 2008 Before Contes du temps passe 1697 Charles Perrault s Griselidis Souhaits and Peau The Romantic Review Volume 99 Number 3 pp 175 189 Aarne Antti Thompson Stith The types of the folktale a classification and bibliography Folklore Fellows Communications FFC no 184 Helsinki Academia Scientiarum Fennica 1961 pp 137 138 Thompson Stith 1977 The Folktale University of California Press p 97 ISBN 0 520 03537 2 Jack Zipes The Great Fairy Tale Tradition From Straparola and Basile to the Brothers Grimm p 648 ISBN 0 393 97636 X Camarena Julio Cuentos tradicionales de Leon Vol I Tradiciones orales leonesas 3 Madrid Seminario Menendez Pidal Universidad Complutense de Madrid Leon Diputacion Provincial de Leon 1991 p 415 Frayre de Joy e Sor de Plaser Bibilotheque nationale de France Charles Willing Genevieve of Brabant a b Basile Giambattista Sun Moon and Talia Retrieved 31 March 2013 Collis Kathryn 2016 Not So Grimm Fairy Tales ISBN 978 1 5144 4689 8 a b Maria Tatar The Annotated Classic Fairy Tales 2002 96 ISBN 0 393 05163 3 Ashliman D L Sleeping Beauty pitt edu Sleeping Beauty a b Jacob and Wilheim Grimm Grimms Fairy Tales Little Briar Rose Archived 2007 05 20 at the Wayback Machine Harry Velten The Influences of Charles Perrault s Contes de ma Mere L oie on German Folklore p 961 Jack Zipes ed The Great Fairy Tale Tradition From Straparola and Basile to the Brothers Grimm ISBN 0 393 97636 X Harry Velten The Influences of Charles Perrault s Contes de ma Mere L oie on German Folklore p 962 Jack Zipes ed The Great Fairy Tale Tradition From Straparola and Basile to the Brothers Grimm ISBN 0 393 97636 X 050 Sleeping Beauty Great Story Reading Project Maria Tatar The Annotated Brothers Grimm p 376 7 W W Norton amp Company London New York 2004 ISBN 0 393 05848 4 Heidi Anne Heiner The Annotated Sleeping Beauty Archived 2010 02 22 at the Wayback Machine Heidi Anne Heiner Tales Similar to Sleeping Beauty Archived 2010 04 30 at the Wayback Machine Italo Calvino Italian Folktales p 485 ISBN 0 15 645489 0 Italo Calvino Italian Folktales p 744 ISBN 0 15 645489 0 Joseph Jacobs More English Fairy Tales The King of England and his Three Sons Archived 2010 04 27 at the Wayback Machine Maria Tatar The Annotated Brothers Grimm p 230 W W Norton amp company London New York 2004 ISBN 0 393 05848 4 Zhukovsky Vasily Spyashaya carevna Zhukovskij in Russian via Wikisource Tatar Maria 2014 Show and Tell Sleeping Beauty as Verbal Icon and Seductive Story Marvels amp Tales 28 1 142 158 doi 10 13110 marvelstales 28 1 0142 S2CID 161271883 Hugel Melissa November 12 2013 How Disney Princesses Went From Passive Damsels to Active Heroes Mic Retrieved January 22 2016 Sleeping Beauty Time Out Retrieved January 22 2016 Saraiya Sonia December 7 2012 A Feminist Guide to Disney Princesses Jezebel Retrieved January 22 2016 Mize Chelsea July 31 2015 A Feminist Ranking Of All The Disney Princesses Because Not Every Princess Was Down For Waiting For Anyone To Rescue Her Bustle Retrieved February 9 2016 Butler Leigh November 6 2014 How Sleeping Beauty is Accidentally the Most Feminist Animated Movie Disney Ever Made Tor com Retrieved February 10 2016 Golembewski Vanessa September 11 2014 A Definitive Ranking Of Disney Princesses As Feminist Role Models Refinery29 Archived from the original on February 16 2016 Retrieved February 10 2016 The Evolution of Disney Princesses Young Writers Society March 16 2014 Retrieved March 20 2016 Dorson Richard M 1955 The Eclipse of Solar Mythology The Journal of American Folklore 68 270 393 416 doi 10 2307 536766 JSTOR 536766 Myths and Myth makers by John Fiske The Sleeping Princess 1939 IMDb Retrieved 15 April 2020 Sleeping Beauty 1949 Prinsessa Ruusunen original title IMDb 8 April 1949 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Sleeping Beauty 1955 Dornroschen original title IMDb 16 November 1955 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Sleeping Beauty 1959 IMDb 30 October 1959 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Dudko Apollinari Sergeyev Konstantin Spyashchaya krasavitsa Fantasy Music Romance Lenfilm Studio retrieved 2022 06 28 Bass Jules Rankin Arthur Jr 1973 01 21 Sleeping Beauty Festival of Family Classics retrieved 2022 06 28 Some Call It Loving 1973 IMDb 26 October 1973 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Vorlicek Vaclav 1978 03 01 Jak se budi princezny Adventure Comedy Family Deutsche Film DEFA Filmove studio Barrandov retrieved 2022 06 28 Melendez Steven Cuitlahuac Goldilocks and the Three Bears Rumpelstiltskin Little Red Riding Hood Sleeping Beauty Animation Short On Gossamer Wings Productions Bill Melendez Productions retrieved 2022 06 29 Sleeping Beauty 1987 IMDb 12 June 1987 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Inner Dave The Legend of Sleeping Brittany IMDb 11 November 1989 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Britannica s Tales Around the World Animation Encyclopaedia Britannica Films retrieved 2022 06 29 Nobara hime Grimm Masterpiece Theatre 1988 02 17 retrieved 2022 06 28 Hiruma Toshiyuki Takashi 1995 03 17 Sleeping Beauty Animation Family Fantasy Cayre Brothers Jetlag Productions retrieved 2022 06 28 Sleeping Beauty IMDb 23 April 1995 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Sleeping Beauties 2001 Bellas durmientes original title IMDb 9 November 2001 Retrieved 15 April 2020 The Sleeping Beauty 2010 La belle endormie original title IMDb 3 September 2010 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Sleeping Beauty 2011 IMDb Retrieved 15 April 2020 Once Upon a Time IMDb 23 October 2011 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Sleeping Beauty 2014 IMDb 13 July 2017 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Sleeping Beauty 2014 IMDb Retrieved 15 April 2020 Maleficent 2014 IMDb 28 May 2014 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Ever After High IMDb Retrieved 15 April 2020 The Curse of Sleeping Beauty 2016 IMDb 2 June 2016 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Maleficent Mistress of Evil 2019 IMDb 20 Oct 2019 Retrieved 11 November 2021 Hill Robert 1971 Tennyson s Poetry p 544 New York Norton Cook Howard Willard Our Poets of Today p 271 at Google Books Sleeping Beauty The David Brass Rare Books Retrieved 15 April 2020 Transformations by Anne Sexton The Sleeping Beauty Series Anne Rice 2017 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Tepper Sheri S 1992 Beauty ISBN 9780553295276 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Briar Rose Jane Yolen 2019 Retrieved 15 April 2020 Spindle s End Penguin Random House Network Clementine ASIN 0340850698 Flinn Alex 28 April 2009 A Kiss in Time ISBN 978 0060874193 The Sleeper and the Spindle Neil Gaiman Retrieved 15 April 2020 The Gates of Sleep Elemental Masters Book 2 Amazon Retrieved 15 April 2020 Sleeping Beauty the One Who Took the Really Long Nap A Wish Novel Twice Upon a Time 2 A Wish Novel ASIN 043979658X The Sleepless Beauty Malice Misrule Ravel Ma Mere l Oye genedelisa com Sleeping Beauty Wakes bandcamp Retrieved 15 April 2020 There Was A Princess singalong org uk 2019 musical website Little Briar Rose Nintendo Retrieved 15 April 2020 Further reading EditArtal Susana Bellas durmientes en el siglo XIV In Montevideana 10 Universidad de la Republica Linardi y Risso 2019 pp 321 336 Starostina Aglaia Chinese Medieval Versions of Sleeping Beauty In Fabula vol 52 no 3 4 2012 pp 189 206 https doi org 10 1515 fabula 2011 0017 de Vries Jan Dornroschen In Fabula 2 no 1 1959 110 121 https doi org 10 1515 fabl 1959 2 1 110External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sleeping Beauty The complete set of Grimms Fairy Tales including Sleeping Beauty at Standard Ebooks Sleeping beauty in the woods by Perrault 1870 illustrated scanned book via Internet Archive The Stalk of Flax adapted by Amy Friedman and Meredith Johnson The Sleeping Beauty A painting by John Wood engraved by F Bacon and with a poetical illustration by Letitia Elizabeth Landon in the Forget Me Not annual 1837 Texts on Wikisource Sleeping Beauty Little Briar Rose Sleeping Beauty The Encyclopedia Americana 1920 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sleeping Beauty amp oldid 1133743409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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