Peter Pan: Difference between revisions

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{{work|wppage=Peter and Wendy}}
{{Infobox book
[[File:peter pan book small.jpg|frame]]
| title = Peter Pan
 
| original title = Peter Pan; or, the Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up
[[File: | image = peter pan book small.jpg|frame]]
| caption = Cover of the 1915 edition. (Illustration by F. D. Bedford)
| author = J. M. Barrie
| central theme =
| elevator pitch =
| genre =
| publication date = 1911
| source page exists =
| wiki URL =
| wiki name =
}}
{{quote|''Second to the right, and then straight on till morning.'' |'''The original directions Peter gives to Neverland''' (although it turns out there isn't really a 'direction' as such. He just gets there. He only gives these directions to sound clever to Wendy.)}}
 
James M. Barrie was a prolific writer at the turn of the 20th century, but his most-beloved works are his 1904 play and novels about '''Peter Pan''', the boy who refused to grow up and lives in Neverland, a [[Magical Land]]. He has a feisty fairy [[Sidekick]] in Tinker Bell.
 
One spring evening, Peter follows his wayward shadow into a young girl's bedroom. When Wendy Darling fastens his shadow back on, Peter invites her to come and look after his Lost Boys, similarly ageless kids who (like him) lack a mother.
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Wendy and her brothers, John and Michael, fly away to Neverland, where the boys have many adventures while Wendy mothers them. Finally, after a climactic battle with Peter's [[Big Bad|archenemy]], the [[Pirate]] Captain Hook, Wendy decides she's had enough of Neverland. Peter agrees to let her go, and to let her take her brothers and the Lost Boys with her. Twenty years later, Peter Pan returns for Wendy's daughter Jane, and the adventures begin anew.
 
Peter Pan is a [[Trickster]], only nominally human. In ''[[Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens]]'', Peter is alluded to as being half bird; as all children in fact come from birds, but only Peter is close enough to his youth to remember ''being'' a bird. In Neverland, he is more like a playful demigod, with aspects of Puck and Pan. The character has become something of a cultural symbol for youthful exuberance and innocence, especially if it persists into adulthood; it also evokes the poignant flip side - never becoming truly mature. [[Michael Jackson]] identified with the character so much he named his estate (with an amusement park, et. al. on the grounds) "Neverland Ranch". The darker implications of eternal youth and perpetual irresponsibility is likely why a well-remembered 1987 film about teen vampires was called ''[[The Lost Boys]]''.
 
Also in the 1950s, a successful Broadway musical version of the story was launched; live TV broadcasts of it with Mary Martin as Peter were ratings winners, and this version is frequently staged in US theaters great and small to this day. An unusual quirk of most stagings of the play and musical, going back to its original productions, is that Peter is traditionally [[Crosscast Role|played by a young woman instead of a preteen male actor]].
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** Played straight with Peter's lifespan in comparison to those of mortals; he'll probably be picking up Wendy's descendants and taking them to Neverland until the world ends.
* [[Westminster Chimes]]: In the play, quoted in "Tender Shepherd".
* [[:Category:Yandere|Yandere]]: Sweet, sweet Tinkerbell....wants to kill Wendy for clinging to Peter Pan.
** Somewhat [[Justified Trope|justified]] in that Tink is a fairy, and thus too small to experience more than one emotion at a time. She's either a perfect angel or an utter demon, and when she's jealous, well...
* [[You No Take Candle]]: The Piccaninnies talk this way.
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* [[Acceptable Breaks From Canon]]: For a sequel to be written under the terms supplied by Ormond Street Hospital, there ''had'' to be a few of these. Geraldine McCaughrean described it as taking out a few stitches.
* [[Applied Phlebotinum]]: Turns out that putting on someone's clothes makes you ''become'' more like that person.
* {{spoiler|[[Back Fromfrom the Dead]]: Tinkerbell, who died in the original book, is in the last third of this one resurrected thanks to Fireflyer.}}
* [[Big Eater]]: Fireflyer, the newborn blue fairy, is always hungry and will eat [[Extreme Omnivore|anything]], including [[Rule of Funny|musical notes]].
* [[Bus Crash]]: {{spoiler|Michael died in the war}} during the time skip.
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* [[Gender Bender]]: {{spoiler|Tootles}}, for the entire book, after {{spoiler|putting on his daughter's ballet dress to magically become young again. (He has no sons). In typical Neverland fashion, he quickly forgets his past life, including the fact that he was a guy in the first place, and becomes girlier even than Wendy. Things get pretty awkward when he decides, like every female character, that he wants to marry Peter}}.
* [[Killed Off for Real]]: {{spoiler|Michael}}. But ''not'' {{spoiler|Hook}}.
* {{spoiler|[[Love At First Sight]]: Fireflyer and Tinkerbell, sort of. Fireflyer is revealed to have developed a crush on Tinkerbell long before he even meets her, thanks to Sightly's stories about her, and it's his wish that eventually calls her [[Back Fromfrom the Dead|back to life]].}}
* [[The Power of Rock]]: Or should we say, rhythm and blues.
* [[Spin Offspring]]: Averted with the human characters (though Wendy's daughter Jane appears a few times, and children of other characters are mentioned, though not by name). Played straight with "Puppy", a descendant of the original Nana, who joins the adventure.
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* [[Suspiciously Similar Substitute]]: Averted with Fireflyer, who's mostly in the story as a replacement for Tinkerbell, but beyond being the "token fairy" he's almost nothing like her, being an [[Keet|over-enthusiastic,]] [[Big Eater|gluttonous]] [[Motor Mouth]] and [[Self-Proclaimed Liar|liar]] who befriends Slightly rather than Peter.
* [[Took a Level In Kindness]]: Bratty, vain Slightly became ''extremely'' sensitive during the time skip. [[Justified Trope|It's possible to infer]] that he was softened out by misfortune, as Tootles was in the original; the book and play imply that he was taken down a peg or two after the boys left Neverland, and by the events of ''Peter Pan In Scarlet'' {{spoiler|his wife has died, leaving him with no children}}.
* [[The Villain Must Be Punished]]: Normally the selfish and heartless Peter sees fighting Hook as a game. Then Hook nearly kills Tinkerbell with a poison meant for Peter, and kidnaps the Lost Boys as well as the Darlings. Peter, in his coldest voice, whispers, "Hook or me this time" and goes for one final showdown.
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:National Film Registry]]
[[Category:Theatrical Productions]]
[[Category:Fairy Tale]]
[[Category:Children's Literature]]
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[[Category:Literature]]
[[Category:Multiple Works Need Separate Pages]]
[[Category:Literature of the 1910s]]
[[Category:Public Domain Character]]
[[Category:Character]]]