Alice in Wonderland (partially lost original draft of Disney animated film; 1939): Difference between revisions

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(Adding the score and some plot details.)
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Ultimately, the Disney studios instead went for a lighter, more modern approach with the final film. However, bits and pieces of this early version have emerged from time to time.
Ultimately, the Disney studios instead went for a lighter, more modern approach with the final film. However, bits and pieces of this early version have emerged from time to time.


==Plot==
==Synopsis==
The film opens with Alice on a riverbank like in the final. She eventually sees the White Rabbit and follows him down a hole leading to a massive void of gems, stars, and ferocious bats. She then meets the talking bottle (voiced by Cliff Edwards), who offers to give Alice a drink of his magic, growing her and then shrinking her. When she shrinks, she is washed into Wonderland by her own tears. She is rescued by the Mouse, and then whisked off to the island of the Gryphon and Mock Turtle and participates in the Lobster Quadriddle. The Cheshire Cat then scares them all away, but befriends Alice in her hunt for the white Rabbit.
The film opens with Alice on a riverbank like in the final. She eventually sees the White Rabbit and follows him down a hole leading to a massive void of gems, stars, and ferocious bats. The bats warn her that the Queen of Hearts will kill her if she arrives down there, but then Alice tells of her cat Dinah and her eating of bats, and the bats flee in terror. Alice ends up racing on a great ribbon into a hall where she notices the White Rabbit entering a door. She then meets the talking bottle (voiced by Cliff Edwards), who offers to give Alice a drink of his magic to shrink her and allow her to enter the garden. She finds, to her dismay, that the door is locked. She is then given the "vice-versa", growing her immensely. The Bottle mocks her, and she begins to cry. The Bottle then flings a small shrinking cake into her mouth and she is washed into Wonderland by her own tears. She is rescued by the Mouse, and then whisked off to the island of the Gryphon and Mock Turtle and participates in the Lobster Quadrille. She then mentions her cat. They are all terrified, because they dread the word "Cat".
 
She is left all alone in the undersea forest, when she sees the true source of the creatures' terror (how would a '''griffon''' be scared of just a mere cat?); The Cheshire Cat. He shows off his many tricks to Alice, and mentions if Alice would want to play croquet with the Queen, and promises to lead her there. She comes up to the caterpillar, who offers her some advice.


==Songs==
==Songs==
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* "Pepper Lullaby"
* "Pepper Lullaby"
* "Mock Turtle Soup Song"
* "Mock Turtle Soup Song"
Score pieces mentioned in script
* ""In Wonderland" Theme" (possibly the same as "Alice in Wonderland" mentioned above)
* "Falling Theme"
* "Bottle Theme"
* "Alice's Shrinking Theme"
* "Alice Growing Theme"
* "Quadrille Accompaniment"
* "Screwy Revision of Growing Theme"


==Availability==
==Availability==

Revision as of 02:07, 7 June 2016

The iconic Mad Hatter signpost.

The Disney film Alice in Wonderland has been planned out since the 1930's, as the first ever animated film by Disney. Ultimately, the film was not released until the year 1951. There were many different drafts of the film through the years, but probably the most intriguing one was the 1939 draft.

The draft had beautiful artwork done by talented British artist David Hall, a script by Al Perkins, and songs by Frank Churchill. The Leica reel composed for the film even had a voice cast, such as Cliff Edwards portraying the Talking Bottle. Walt Disney ultimately turned the draft down, as the denizens of Wonderland looked far too monstrous for his tastes, and were hard to animate, as they resembled the Teniel illustrations too closely. The tone overall was also incredibly grim and frightening, with most of the inhabitants of Wonderland being outright bloodthirsty towards poor Alice (such as the Mad Hatter and March Hare about to dice Alice into pieces with scissors and a knife, Alice being attacked by hordes of birds, and even being placed on a guillotine near the end).

Ultimately, the Disney studios instead went for a lighter, more modern approach with the final film. However, bits and pieces of this early version have emerged from time to time.

Synopsis

The film opens with Alice on a riverbank like in the final. She eventually sees the White Rabbit and follows him down a hole leading to a massive void of gems, stars, and ferocious bats. The bats warn her that the Queen of Hearts will kill her if she arrives down there, but then Alice tells of her cat Dinah and her eating of bats, and the bats flee in terror. Alice ends up racing on a great ribbon into a hall where she notices the White Rabbit entering a door. She then meets the talking bottle (voiced by Cliff Edwards), who offers to give Alice a drink of his magic to shrink her and allow her to enter the garden. She finds, to her dismay, that the door is locked. She is then given the "vice-versa", growing her immensely. The Bottle mocks her, and she begins to cry. The Bottle then flings a small shrinking cake into her mouth and she is washed into Wonderland by her own tears. She is rescued by the Mouse, and then whisked off to the island of the Gryphon and Mock Turtle and participates in the Lobster Quadrille. She then mentions her cat. They are all terrified, because they dread the word "Cat".

She is left all alone in the undersea forest, when she sees the true source of the creatures' terror (how would a griffon be scared of just a mere cat?); The Cheshire Cat. He shows off his many tricks to Alice, and mentions if Alice would want to play croquet with the Queen, and promises to lead her there. She comes up to the caterpillar, who offers her some advice.

Songs

These songs were written by Frank Churchill.

  • "It's Crazy to Be Sane"
  • "Lobster Quadriddle"
  • "Garden Snips"
  • "Alice in Wonderland" (different from final version)
  • "Pepper Lullaby"
  • "Mock Turtle Soup Song"

Score pieces mentioned in script

  • ""In Wonderland" Theme" (possibly the same as "Alice in Wonderland" mentioned above)
  • "Falling Theme"
  • "Bottle Theme"
  • "Alice's Shrinking Theme"
  • "Alice Growing Theme"
  • "Quadrille Accompaniment"
  • "Screwy Revision of Growing Theme"

Availability

In 1944, 30 of Hall's illustrations were used in the book Walt Disney's Surprise Package, which contained a telling of the original Alice's Adventures in Wonderland story.  As this book has not been available for years, it is thus quite rare.  In 1986, a full-sized Alice's Adventures in Wonderland reprint was available with dozens of Hall illustrations. The 1995 Archive Collection laserdisc also contained a recreation of the Leica reel of the film, but it was incomplete, as the last quarter of the script was missing (and the reel was never officially re-released, but can be found here). The songs commissioned for the film were also on the disc in a separate section, and some of them have been published in "Disney's Lost Chords".

A later DVD (Un-Anniversary Edition) incorporated an excerpt of the film under the guise of a "deleted scene" from the final draft. This was kept in every subsequent home entertainment release.

Thad Komorowski once compiled a zip file of these boards, but the file has disappeared. Many of the the sketches that can be found are below.

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