Which pantomime character married alice fitzwarren
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Like this: Like Loading Loading Comments Email Required Name Required Website. Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email. In disgrace he is forced to leave the shop, to leave London and never to see Alice again. The action of the pantomime moves to Highgate Hill.
Dick and Tommy the Cat turn to take one last look at London before he makes the long journey home. It is then that the Fairy intervenes. Often in the pantomime story she creates a spell that makes Dick Whittington dream of the future. In this dream he sees himself made Lord Mayor of London, with Alice by his side. On Highgate Hill the bells of London can be heard. Act Two usually opens on the docks. In some more recent versions sometimes the Alderman joins the ship, and on occasion, Alice as well.
Dick Whittington and Tommy the Cat steal on board the ship as stowaways, to seek their fame and hopefully their fortune. In many versions King Rat and his fellow rats also steal aboard the ship. A great storm brews up.
The ship is in danger. Some versions of the pantomime have this storm created by the magic of King Rat, in others it is a storm that will soon sink the Saucy Sally and take her to the bottom of the sea. The characters are washed ashore-bedraggled, wet and lost. In Morocco they have never set eyes on a cat before. However, King Rat and his cronies are causing chaos in his Kingdom.
The place is over run with rats! When Tommy the Cat arrives at the Palace there is great excitement and fear. No-one in the Kingdom has ever seen a cat.
Dick persuades the Sultan that Tommy will kill all his rats. Usually there is a fight with Tommy and the Rats- often he takes on King Rat, and in some versions Dick steps in and despatches King Rat himself. The Sultan is overjoyed. He gives Dick Whittington half his treasure, but Dick declines the hand of his daughter the Princess in marriage. Alice Fitzwarren is the only girl for him. He lives in a poor parish and has nothing to eat and no work, so stays alive by eating whatever scraps he can find or beg for.
He has heard exciting stories about a glorious city called London, whose streets, the stories say, are paved with gold. So one day, when a wagon comes through the village on its way to London, Dick befriends the wagoner and travels with him to London. When he arrives in London, however, Dick Whittington is very disappointed to discover that the streets are not paved with gold, but with dirt.
There is no work, and no food. Tired and starving, he sits outside the home of a wealthy merchant named Mr Fitzwarren, but the cook tries to shoo him away. When Mr Fitzwarren is making a venture overseas, he asks everyone in his household to put something forward to send away to sea and make their fortune.
But as Dick Whittington only has his cat, he reluctantly parts with that, and sends it to sea. The cook — annoyed that Alice and others in the house are showing the orphan boy such kindness — takes against him even more, and starts taunting him for sending his cat to sea to make his fortune for him. When the cat comes in and proves what a good mouser she is, the king and queen see that she and her kittens would prove invaluable to the kingdom, so they give the captain a huge sum of money for her.
Now he was a gentleman, and treated Alice so well, Mr Fitzwarren proposed that Dick and his daughter should marry, which they did. That, in summary, is what happens in the traditional fairy tale of Dick Whittington and his cat. His cat, of course, plays her part, being exceptionally good at catching mice and rats. Instead, if we can classify the story of Dick Whittington as a fairy tale, it is because it contains many of the plot features we associate with classic fairy tales: it has an orphan child as its protagonist, who absents himself from home at the earliest opportunity a common feature of fairy stories and folk tales.
It features an animal helper who proves invaluable in making the hero his fortune.
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