![]() ![]() Tinker Bell has become one of Disney's most important branding icons for over half a century along with Jiminy Cricket, and Mickey Mouse, and is generally known as "a symbol of 'the magic of Disney'". She doesn't speak but as in the original play, Peter verbally interprets her communications for the sake of the audience, and bell noises are used when she makes gestures. ![]() In Walt Disney's 1953 film version of Peter Pan, the character is blonde, wears a green dress and white slippers. ![]() Mae Whitman ( Disney Fairies, Kinect: Disneyland Adventures, Disney Infinity) Tinker Bell as depicted in Disney media the character has become one of the company's most important icons since her debut In the 1924 film, Tinker Bell was played by Virginia Browne Faire. Her favourite insult (as in Barrie's play) is "You silly ass!", which the audience learns to recognise because it is always represented by the same motif: four notes (presumably one for each syllable of the phrase), followed by a growl on the bassoon.įilm adaptations provided the first vocal effects for the character, whether through sound, such as musical expressions or the sound of a tinkling bell, or human speech. In the musical version of the play, she was also represented by a darting light, accompanied by a celesta. Originally, no fairy dust was mentioned in the play but Barrie added to the script the necessity to sprinkle it to enable the children to fly because "so many children tried from their beds and needed surgical attention." Inspector of Taxes, who sent Jane Wren a tax demand. ![]() However, a 'Jane (or Jenny) Wren' was listed among the cast on the programmes as playing Tinker Bell this was a joke which also helped with the mystique of the fairy character, and fooled H.M. In the original stage productions, Tinker Bell was represented on stage by a darting light "created by a small mirror held in the hand off-stage and reflecting a little circle of light from a powerful lamp" and her voice was "a collar of bells and two special ones that Barrie brought from Switzerland". In the first draft of the play, she is called Tippy-toe, but became Tinker Bell in the later drafts and final version. At the end of the novel, when Peter flies back to find an older Wendy, it is mentioned that Tinker Bell died in the year after Wendy and her brothers left Neverland, and Peter no longer remembers her. The extremes in her personality are explained in the story by the fact that a fairy's size prevents her from holding more than one feeling at a time, so when she is angry she has no counterbalancing compassion. Though sometimes ill-tempered, jealous, vindictive and inquisitive, she is also helpful and kind to Peter. Her speech consists of the sounds of a tinkling bell, which is understandable only to those familiar with the language of the fairies. She also appears in the official 2006 sequel Peter Pan in Scarlet by Geraldine McCaughrean commissioned by Great Ormond Street Hospital as well as the "Peter and the Starcatchers" book series by Ridley Pearson and Dave Barry.Īt first only a supporting character described by her creator as "a common fairy", her animated incarnation was a hit and has since become a widely recognized unofficial mascot of The Walt Disney Company, next to the Walt Disney company's official mascot Mickey Mouse, and the centrepiece of its Disney Fairies media franchise including the direct-to-DVD film series Tinker Bell and Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color.īarrie described Tinker Bell as a fairy who mended pots and kettles, an actual tinker of the fairy folk. She has appeared in a variety of film and television adaptations of the Peter Pan stories, in particular the 1953 animated Walt Disney picture Peter Pan. Barrie's 1904 play Peter Pan and its 1911 novelisation Peter and Wendy. Tinker Bell is a fictional character from J. Tinker Bell (2005, bronze) by Diarmuid Byron O'Connorĭebi Derryberry ( Peter Pan and the Pirates) ![]()
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