Disney • In the
Walt Disney Animation Studios film
Pinocchio (1940), the Fairy (voiced by
Evelyn Venable) is referred to as the
Blue Fairy. She is depicted with blonde hair and blue eyes, rather than the turquoise hair and black eyes of her book counterpart. In this case, the "blue" in her name refers to the color of her eyes and gown. The Blue Fairy is the one who brings Pinocchio to life after Geppetto wished that he was a real boy. • The Blue Fairy appears in ''
Disney's Villains' Revenge'', voiced by
Rosalyn Landor. • The Blue Fairy is the main character in the prequel novel
When You Wish Upon a Star written by
Elizabeth Lim and published on April 4, 2023 as part of Disney's
A Twisted Tale anthology series. The story details her origins as Chiara Belmagio, a baker's eldest daughter and philanthropist in the small Italian town of Pariva; her complex relationship with her narcissistic younger sister Ilaria; and her eventual transformation into a fairy.
Other appearances 's 1972 film
The Adventures of Pinocchio In
Giuliano Cenci's 1972 animated film
The Adventures of Pinocchio, the Fairy (voiced by
Vittoria Febbi in Italian and by
Martha Scott in the English dub) is portrayed much more accurately to the book than she is in the Disney adaptation. She has no role in creating Pinocchio, though she does offer him guidance and support. as The Fairy with Turquoise Hair in the TV series
The Adventures of Pinocchio (1972) In 1972's Italian miniseries
The Adventures of Pinocchio, she is played by
Gina Lollobrigida. This version is the ghost of Geppetto's deceased wife. The Fairy appears in ''
Saban's The Adventures of Pinocchio'', voiced by
Masako Ikeda. Angelica the Blue Fairy is the
antagonist in the Japanese/Australian stage show
Once Upon a Midnight.
The Blue Fairy was a 1950s' children's program on
WGN-TV in
Chicago, hosted by
Brigid Bazlen as the fairy. In a 1997 article for the
Miami New Times, reporter Lynda Edwards describes hearing modern urban legends from Miami's homeless children, who cope with their situation by invoking Latino and Afro-Cuban legends including the image of "the pale blue lady" or blue fairy. Derived from the Catholic legend of the Blessed Mother leading a spiritual army of angels, the Blue Lady protects the children from poverty-related terrors, against the minions of a vengeful
La Llorona. In Alberto Sironi's 2008
miniseries, the Fairy is portrayed by
Violante Placido. She rescues Pinocchio from being murdered by the Fox and the Cat in a dark forest and nurses him back to health. She warns him that he must be good and to not run astray in the future, otherwise both her heart and Gepetto's will break in disappointment. She also states that because their hearts are not made of wood there would be no magic capable of mending them if it happened. In the 2012 Italian animated film
Pinocchio, the Fairy seems as young as Pinocchio and shows a sense of humour. As on many versions, she forgives him and encourages him to do good. She restores him from his donkey form to puppet form, and also turns him to a real boy for risking his life for Gepetto. In the
Vertigo comic series
Fables, she appears as a
blue-haired fairy who makes
Pinocchio into a (never-aging) boy. Actress
Keegan Connor Tracy plays the Blue Fairy in
ABC's
Once Upon a Time, like other characters in the series, taking elements from her Disney counterpart. In the series, the residents of Storybrooke,
Maine are former fairytale characters with their memories wiped by a curse cast by the
Evil Queen from the tale of
Snow White. The good fairies from the fairytale world are transformed into the
nuns of Storybrooke's local
convent, with the Blue Fairy as
Mother Superior. Her history with Pinocchio is still intact, but is also shown to have histories with
Tinker Bell,
Tiger Lily, and Fiona the Black Fairy. In the live-action Italian film
Pinocchio (2019), co-written, directed and co-produced by
Matteo Garrone, the Fairy is portrayed by as a child and
Marine Vacth (dubbed by
Domitilla D'Amico) as an adult. In the English version, Baldari Calabria dubbed herself, while Vacth was dubbed again by D'Amico. In ''
Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio, the Fairy with Turquoise Hair is rewritten as the character of the Wood Sprite'' (voiced by
Tilda Swinton), a blue hairless humanoid with eight wings and a feathered snake-like tail. The Wood Sprite also has a sister named
Death (also voiced by Swinton). In
Lies of P, the Fairy appears as a character named Sophia who appears in the central hub of the game to help players level up and provides crucial information about the game world and plot. The sci-fi/fantasy anthology
Once Upon a Future Time Volume 4 includes a short story, "The Blue Fairy," in which a woman with blue hair is accused of illegally creating androids. ==References==