The Girl Who Fits This Slipper: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
[[File:cinderella glass slipper fitting.jpg|link=Cinderella (Disney1950 film)|frame|Looks like you have your future [[Princess]]. ]]
 
{{quote|'''Grand Duke:''' The Prince, Sire, swears he'll marry none but [[Trope Namer|the girl who fits this slipper]].
'''King:''' He said ''that'', did he? Ha ha, we've got him!
'''Grand Duke:''' But, Sire, [[Lampshade Hanging|this slipper may fit any number of girls]].
'''King:''' That's his problem. He's given his word, [[Exact Words|we'll hold him to it]].|''[[Cinderella (Disney film)|Cinderella]]''}}
|''[[Cinderella (1950 film)|Cinderella]]''}}
 
In fiction, some key pieces of clothing can only be worn by certain people. Shoes are a common choice, but other clothing will do. Thus if it fits someone, it can be used to ID them. Sometimes this can work in [[Real Life]], but it's usually not enough evidence on its own.
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Compare [[Identification by Dental Records]]. May overlap with [[Clothes Make the Superman]], if the clothes bestow special abilities but [[Loyal Phlebotinum|will not work for just anyone]].
 
[[No Real Life Examples, Please]], {{noreallife|as some involve evidence in court trials, and that could lead to [[Natter]].}}
 
{{examples}}
== Anime &and Manga ==
* Parodied in the ''[[Ranma ½|Ranma One Half]]'' manga by a story arc titled "Cinderella's Favor" in which a guy has gathered girls to his private island and asks them to step on his head, so he can compare their feet and find [[Love At First Punch|the girl who stomped on his head a long time ago]] (which, of course, is actually [[Gender Bender|Ranma]]).
* ''[[Battle of the Planets]]'': Princess once lost one of her boots during a battle and the enemies try to use it to find her.
 
 
== Comic Books ==
* The wish ring in ''[[Little Ego]]'', which will only work for the person who manages to slip it on. Naturally this person turns out to be Ego.
 
 
== Fairy Tales ==
* ''[[Cinderella (novel)|Cinderella]]'' is likely is the [[Trope Maker]] and [[Ur Example]].
* There are also several other fairy tales that use the same idea, except the item of clothing is a ring rather than a slipper.
 
 
== Fan Works ==
* In many ''[[Harry Potter (novel)|Harry Potter]]'' fanfics, each pureblood family has a ring that automatically resizes itself to fit whoever becomes head of that family -- and just may kill a pretender.
 
== Film ==
 
* Disney's ''[[Cinderella (Disney1950 film)|Cinderella]]'', the [[Trope Namer]], acknowledges the potential absurdity of the trope: the Grand Duke protests that the slipper could fit any number of girls, to which the King replies that he doesn't care, he's holding the prince to his [[Exact Words]] in order to ensure he gets married. The trope is also ultimately subverted, as Cinderella doesn't even manage to try on the slipper before it's smashed... but she is able to produce its match, which serves as even better proof of her identity. That references an often-omitted part of the Charles Perrault fairy tale, in which after Cinderella fits her foot into the slipper, she pulls out the match and puts that on her other foot.
== Films -- Animation ==
* Disney's ''[[Cinderella (Disney film)|Cinderella]]'', the [[Trope Namer]], acknowledges the potential absurdity of the trope: the Grand Duke protests that the slipper could fit any number of girls, to which the King replies that he doesn't care, he's holding the prince to his [[Exact Words]] in order to ensure he gets married. The trope is also ultimately subverted, as Cinderella doesn't even manage to try on the slipper before it's smashed... but she is able to produce its match, which serves as even better proof of her identity. That references an often-omitted part of the Charles Perrault fairy tale, in which after Cinderella fits her foot into the slipper, she pulls out the match and puts that on her other foot.
* In ''Cinderella III: A Twist in Time'', Prince Charming ''himself'' acknowledges the flimsiness of a shoe size as proof of one's identity, but also points out they don't have any other means of finding Cinderella. His and the king's doubts about this plan become confirmed when Lady Tremaine uses [[It Makes Sense in Context|a stolen magic wand]] to make the glass slipper fit stepsister Anastasia instead.
 
 
== Films -- Live-Action ==
* Subverted in ''[[Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country]]''. The boots of one of the assassins are found, but in the locker of a crewman with webbed feet, and the boots are for humans. [[Defied Trope|They were obviously planted to avoid this trope]]. Chekov even mentions the aphorism from the "[[Cultural Posturing|old Russian fairy tale]]" - ''"If shoe fits, wear it."'' He notably fails to look down to make sure that the boots might indeed fit the person he's accusing.
* Used as contributing evidence in ''[[Inglourious Basterds]]''.
* Also subverted in [[Cinderella (2015 film)|Disney's 2015 live-action adaptation]] of the story -- the slipper is enchanted to refuse any foot but Cinderella's, but the Prince doesn't ''need'' it once he sees Cinderella because he recognizes her immediately. (He's also actually the ''king'' by that point, and is not bound by an [[Exact Words]] promise, so he simply can say "that's her" and no one argues.)
 
 
== Literature ==
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* In ''[[Chronicles of the Kencyrath]]'', the Kenthiar is a collar that only the Highlord can wear—everyone else who touches the inner surface will lose their fingers, or worse.
* In [[Diana Wynne Jones]]' ''[[The Dalemark Quartet|The Crown of Dalemark]]'', Mitt is {{spoiler|descended from the Adon and destined to become King, and the ring that marks him out as such actually grows and shrinks in order to fit him perfectly on any finger he puts it on. He doesn't realise, because the ring gets swapped with a nonmagical copy.}}
* ''[[Discworld/Witches Abroad|Witches Abroad]]'' utterly dismantles this trope. Lilith is trying to [[Invoked Trope]] the trope for the Cinderella story she's masterminding, and Nanny Ogg and Granny Weatherwax point out that a lot of feet can fit a shoe that size with enough socks... and even if you don't have socks, there must be a ''lot'' of people with that shoe size in the city. The only way to use it as a test is if you know who dropped it in the first place....
* Used in [[Mercedes Lackey]]'s remake of ''Cinderella'', ''[[Elemental Masters|Phoenix and Ashes]]''. Cinderella's wicked stepmother chopped off her pinky finger in the first chapter, so when she leaves her gloves behind at the masquerade ball, there's no question about who they belong to. Doesn't stop her wicked stepsister from trying, though, and coming out to the hero to claim her gloves still loopy from the painkillers.
* Justified in ''[[Ella Enchanted]]'': There's fairy blood in Ella's family, so her feet are significantly smaller than most people's.
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* Justified in ''Princess of Glass'': the slipper was molded to the exact shape of the girl's foot. And the slipper isn't the real test anyway—the test is whether the prince can pick out the girl he really loves even with his mind clouded by magic.
* One mystery short had a detective telling a suspect that a killer had left a print behind in blood at the scene of the murder, but it was the print of a glove. The suspect pointed out that would not help identify the killer. The detective said the glove had a distinctive characteristic that would identify the killer exactly and asked the suspect to show him his hands. It turns out, the glove {{spoiler|was made for someone with six fingers}}.
 
 
== Live-Action TV ==
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* Parodied in ''[[The Goodies]]'' episode "Punky Business". Graeme turns Tim into a punk by cutting his leg off. After re-attaching it, he warns Tim that the catch won't last much past midnight. Tim goes to the Trendsetter's Ball, where he loses his leg at midnight. Caroline Kook vows to marry the man whom the leg fits. Cue punks cutting off their own legs.
* Subverted on ''[[The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air|The Fresh Prince of Bel Air]]''. Will finds a last-minute date to a Halloween party in a kind waitress named Cindy, who just happened to dress as Cinderella. At midnight, she flees and drops her shoe and Will thinks he's been "touched by magic"... but then Cindy comes back to claim her shoe and gives Will her phone number.
 
 
== Web Comics ==
* Parodied in ''[[Girl Genius]]'' during the [http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20090107 Cinderella parody].
 
 
== Western Animation ==
* [[Defied]] in ''[[My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic|My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic]]''. Near the end of "The Best Night Ever", the ponies are running away from the Grand Galloping Gala and Rarity drops a slipper. Pinkie Pie tells her, "Now your prince is sure to find you!" Rarity, who has no interest in meeting [[Prince Charmless|Prince Blueblood]] ever again, screams and crushes the slipper.
* An... interesting variation occurred in ''[[Rocko's Modern Life]]'' once: When Rocko accidentally mooned a newspaper camera during a movie premiere, a fashion designer saw the picture, and decided the owner of the posterior would make a perfect underwear model. To find the potential model, all of the men in O-Town took turns sitting in an imprint made of Rocko's bottom in the cement that night.
* ''[[Lola and Virginia]]'': While wearing a yogurt costume, Lola met a celebrity boy. As she left, she lost her glasses and the boy uses them as a clue to find her. Being interested on the boy, Virginia gets her own yogurt costume but Lola proves the truth by being the one who can see while wearing the glasses.
 
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[[Category:Costume Tropes]]
[[Category:These Tropes Are Made for Walking]]
[[Category:The Girl Who Fits This Slipper]]
[[Category:No Real Life Examples, Please]]
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