Thanks to D. L. Hammons: Nicole, Lydia and Katie for co-hosting...
This old post is entered for the Deja Vu blogfest and doubling up for Romantic Friday Writers' Challenge "Sparkle".
If you're a Brit you'll know all about the Pantomime Season - when men dress up as Dames and Women take on the role of Principal boys. Yep, we Brits have real crazy traditions.
The thing with a Panto, is that the scripts are designed to entertain the kiddos with slap-stick humour. Meantime, double entendre roll over cute little kiddo heads and whisper in the ears of the adults, and believe it, raucous laughter then erupts while the kids scream and yell in all innocence of fun and merriment!
So, with this blogfest, as a writer you have the opportunity to let rip with a twisted fairy tale!
How you kidnap the Seven Dwarves, turn Cinderella into a vampire, blow up Aladdin's Cave, shoot the fairy off the Christmas tree, or assassinate Santa, is entirely up to you.
***
Start of Panto: note the names of characters!
The theme for this blogfest is Twisted Fairy Tale -
Anyhoo, mine is a short presentation of Cinderella (see pic above) - a giggle or two will suffice!
The ball is in full swing the clock nearing first strike of midnight.
Starring Adverbia & Adjectivia: the ugly sisters.
--------------------
‘OMG, who is that?’ croaked Adverbia, a sugared plum immediate to mouth as angst washed over her.
‘Who, what, where?’ screamed short-sighted Adjectivia, agitated in extreme because she always refused to be seen in public wearing spectacles.
Adverbia, now near to choking, the sugared plum stuck solidly in throat, her reply mere gobbedly-gook. ‘O ‘er tair.’
Adjectivia noticed Adverbia's distress and gave a resounding slap to her back.
The sugared plum gunned out of Adverbia's mouth and zoomed across the ballroom. Unfortunately, it ended up wedged in the dowager duchess’ wig, which caused much tittering from Adjectivia.
The dowager duchess glanced about to ascertain whom had had the audacity to strike her wig a broadside. As she readjusted her lopsided hairpiece her fingers made contact with the now squidgy sugared plum, and eyes narrowed she assessed its velocity on impact and tragectory path.
Her eyes soon settled on Adverbia; yet another sugared plum gripped between fingers.
Adverbia, engrossed in watching the beautiful young lady dancing with Prince Charming, failed to notice the dowager duchess’ looking her way.
‘There, there, dancing with Prince Charming,' she screamed, 'can you not see her? Oh Adj do put your specs on.'
Reluctanly Adjectivia raised her specs to eyes. ‘I see, I see,’ she rallied, brow furrowed teeth bared. ‘Grrrrr, spit, damn and blast the strumpet. Who is she?’
‘If I knew why would I be asking you?’ snarled Adverbia, sucking second sugared plum.
‘I cannot imagine your asking me, at all,‘ replied Adjectivia, fanning her face with a feather-plumed fan. ‘Uh oh, the dowager duchess is coming this way. And, oh my, that plum you near choked on . . .’
Aware of movement beside her, Adjectivia turned to see Adverbia scurrying away.
‘Oh shitzu,’ she exclaimed, and sped after her ugly sister, because no way was she about to take stick from the dowager duchess, whom it was rumoured had a BDSM dungeon where she thwacked a favoured manservant.
Prince charming noticed the commotion of dowager duchess with silver-topped sword-cane raised and looking as though about to commit murder, his dominatrix aunt already in pursuit of the ugly sisters.
He rushed across to soothe the duchess' enraged state, and copped a crack to shoulder for his trouble. Meanwhile the clock had begun striking the midnight hour.
Unbeknown to the prince, the beautiful Countess of Makebelieve (former dancing partner heard the clock chiming) and sudden upped and fled the ballroom.
Dandini, the Prince' personal aide, ran after the countess but not a sight of her to be seen.
Strange as it seemed, several white mice were milling around in somewhat confused state at the foot of the palace steps. Stranger still, a hollow pumpkin reminiscent in shape to that of coach minus its wheels and left in the middle of the courtyard. A glass slipper too, then spied on the far side of the steps.
Dandini picked up the crystal slipper, fondled it, and stood for moment pondering the disappearance of the Countess of Makebelieve. Why would she flee?
Ah, but come to think of it, when first introduced to Baron Noun-Hardup, the young countess had looked radiant? Yet, when the Baron’s new wife flounced toward her, the Countess of Makebelieve's expression fell ashen as though fearful of the ugly sisters' mother, Pronouncia.
In fact, the more Dandini thought about the strangely beautiful young Countess of Makebelieve, a brief encounter came to mind.
The young countess had to be none other than the girl Dandini had seen in the market a few days prior to the Great Ball: the blasted Get-a-Wife Ball, essentially a singles ball.
Damn it all, the mystery countess was indeed Cinderella Noun-Hardup, the baron’s daughter from his first marriage.
It all made sense now.
Hmmm.
Poor Prince Charming, under extreme pressure from his Uncle to secure a would-be bride this very night had implied interest in the Countess of Makebelieve, though far from his desired choice for a life partner.
And, of course, Noun-Hardup’s second wife had wanted the ugly stepdaughters presented to the Prince excluding the beautiful Cinders from same opportunity.
So, who had helped Cinders make it to the ball in disguise? Cinders, for definite, keen for the prince’ hand in marriage.
Well, that wouldn’t happen any time soon.
Dandini tossed the glass slipper over the palace wall.
The sound of splintering glass to be pure satisfaction to the ear.
Much to Dandini's consternation there was nothing but silence.
NEVERTHELESS: Dandini turned about, sense of glee on face, and there stood Prince Charming.
'You look decidedly guilty, my dear Dandini. What pray, went over yonder wall?'
Dandini chuckled, 'The one item assured to secure a marital noose around your neck, by some do-gooding fairy godmother no doubt.'
‘Thank God, for that,’ said the prince, rubbing the spot where the dowager duchess had clobbered his shoulder. ‘I felt sure my secret obsession soon to be exposed.’
'Oh please, anytime.' Dandini stepped close to the prince, voice fallen to whisper, ‘Kiss me, Queenie.’
‘That I shall, my gorgeous six-pack Dandini, but don't ever call me that in public. Prince I am by day, Queenie by night.’
Dandini fell into the Prince’ arms, said, ‘We cannot hide our love for ever, my prince.’
‘The prince kissed Dandini with passion and intensity.
Unbeknown to the amorous bewigged young gentlemen, the glass slipper remained unscathed and safe in the hands of the real Prince Charming: Prince Rupert Charming.
Supposedly lost at sea when in fact turned into a frog by an evil witch, the real Prince Rupert Charming all the while awaiting his opportunity to reclaim his throne. Knowing only a maiden's kiss can break the evil spell, he's had no luck so far in that quest.
With the glass slipper he has a bartering tool and he knows Cinder's is kind and loving and will want the slipper back, and she'll kiss him for it, he'd bet his life on that for he knows her smitten with the bogus prince: his younger brother Quentin (Queenie) Charming.
Having fantasised over Cinders for three years and a day of his sitting on a lilypad watching her fetch water from the well, Rupert serenades her the very next time she passes by his royal pond!
And Lo & Behold: the ruse works!
Meanwhile: banished from the Principality two men sail off into the sunset!
The End.
***
Believe it, this particular blogfest did extremely well on entrant numbers for Xmas 2010 and we had a great laugh reading everybody's input.
To see entries by other participants to the "Deja vu" blogfest go here.
To see entries by other participants to RFW's "Sparkle" challenge go here.
BTW: I did delete the original 24 comments! Only fair, methought...
40 comments:
Hey Francine, you had me going with this one. What a hoot. I think this is the one where I did my vamp Cinderella! Was fun then and fun now.
Love the verbs that are zinging across the page and the characters are just dandy. I've never seen a real London panto, but I know many of our Aussie soapie actors go across and act in them and love it. I think Kylie Minogue used to do it.
Denise
This is AWESOME!! I had quite a chuckle!!
As for the names... PRICELESS!! *giggles*
Sorry, forgot to leave my link:
http://writer-in-transit.co.za/deja-vu-blogfest/
"Thwacked" is one of my favorite words. And the rest was hilarious, too. Nice to meet you, Francine!
I think I remember this one. That blogfest was a lot of fun.
Ahhhh, Cinderella is my favorite fairy tale. Nice twist!
Witty and hilarious! Kudo's for crafting the original and selecting it now as your repost! Thank you for taking part in the blogfest and making today so special!! :)
This one was new to me. It is hilarious. Thanks for sharing.
Hilarious.
Is that Richard Chamberlain in one of those pictures.
Love Sean Bean as Sharpe.
Well done!
Hi Francine, nice to read your work again. Loved the story! Hilarious read.
That was so clever! I think I remember this from the first time. Brilliant, and thanks for joining the Blogfest!
Love those names-what a fun post! So entertaining, thanks :)
Hi Francine! I'm here from the Deja Vu fest and it's great to discover your blog. This cracked me up! I only recently heard of Panto, it sounds like such a fun tradition. Nice to meet you! :)
OMG, I was cracking up! If it'd been 7am, and I was drinking coffee, you can guarentee that coffee would be all over my computer screen! Met ya from the Deja Vu blogvest - new follower and glad to be here! Have a good weekend.
Pantomime Season, huh? That explains everything…I knew the guys at that party weren’t quite, right. I thought it was me. This is a fairy tale I would never read to my kids (BDSM, Baron Noun-Hardup – oh, I initially read that one wrong, oh my). I enjoyed it greatly. (By the way, I have those two yellow dresses in my closet; does that mean I am up with the fashion trend?)
Adult fairy tale, huh? LOL. Great job as always. I've missed you, Roland
Hi Girls & Guys!
Many thanks go to the co-hosts for this blogfest, and to all of you thanks for stopping by to comment! ;) And a special thanks to new followers... :)
Will be over right away to read all your posts...
best
F
Clever and hilarious! And those photos are great! Nice to meet you, Francine!
Hi, Francine! Checkin' in from the Déjá Vu blogfest. :) This is awesome!! Such a clever and hilarious story. I especially love the ugly stepsisters' names, heehee. Hope you have a great weekend!
Oh so hilarious! Thanks for sharing!
Hi, I came by way of the blogfest.
Being British am well aware of panto's, thought yout post hilarious thanks for putting a smile on my face.
Yvonne.
I really heart the ugly sisters. A very entertaining tale, Francine.
The deja vu blogfest was a great idea.
I was so entertained by this creative write..ha..ha...I thought for a moment that the Prince Charming will never find her. Enjoyed this twisted fairy tale ~
I loved this the first time, and I adore it even more now Francine.
Way Cool.
..........dhoel
Funny and romantic. Reminds me of a few shakesperian tales too:)
What a treat to find you on the Deja Vu blogfest.
And, what a way to start my day! LOVED your twisted Cinderella tale.
I'll be back! (Crossing fingers you have an RSS feed. My inbox runneth over.)
Off for more brainio exercise doing the hop. I choose that over cardio today.
Thanks for this Francine, I hadn't read it before and it certainly made me chuckle!
That was hilarious - the names cracked me up right off, and I may have to borrow "shitzu". Thanks for the entertainment - well done~
I've never heard of the Pantomime tradition!
The names are great. So fun.
p.s. I just bought Her Favored Captain. :D
Hi ladies and gents!
Thanks all for stopping by. I'm slowly making my round the Deja vu blogfest.
Roland: I've missed you, too. Time flies, and my wings seem a bit tattered of late. :)
Melissa, thanks for coming back and I hope you enjoy Her Favoured Captain. It's a bit raunchy in parts ... ;)
best
F
Dear Francine,
What a fun idea for a blog feast, 'Deju vu'! And what an imaginative and fun take on the classic fairy tale, Cinderella. I did not know where it was going.
I agree with Adura Ojo about the its connection to Shakespearian tales. Shakespeare mixed high and low in his plays. I am sure that the pantos are, in that sense, a part of a tradition that goes back to Shakespeare. (But since it's in your blood you don't see it, Francine. It's only we who are outsiders who see it!)
Too bad I don't have time to write or rewrite something for 'Deja vu'. I have had so much to do in my 'offline-life' right now, that the RFWers challenge is the only blogging that I am doing until next year.
Cinderella is also a favourite of mine. I have been trying to write a poem with a Cinderella-theme for the 30th December-post, but haven't gotten very far. (I'm not a very good poet.) They's a touch of 'Cinders' in this week's post, as you have already noticed.
Thank you for visiting!
Hope you have a safe and happy holiday season,
Anna
For the benefit of other readers:
Anna's RFW challenge No 27 Sparkle!
LOL Francine, three cheers for the frog.
Nancy
Dear Francine,
Sorry about the typos in my comment. I've just notice them now.
I'm also cheering for the frog.
Best wishes,
Anna
Too funny! Adverbias don't always get enough credit. I'm a big fan of adverbias. Seriously.
*wipes tears from powdered face* Sniff... hilarious! Ahem, now where can one see this wonderful show? x
Hello Francine! I'm new here, taking a turtles approach to the blogfest. Look forward to read you! Best, Shannon
Hello Francine.
Oh this is a riot! Loved it! Your creativity knows no limits. The photos are perfect too. Certainly brightened my hectic start to the week.
Awesome entry for this week's theme!
Thanks for sharing.
For ref:
On This Painful, Tear-filled Night
Hi ladies and Gent (true gent)!
Lovely to have you all here, and may you all have a great Christmas and a Happy New year. ;)
best
F
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