Disney depictions Unlike the Grimms' version of the fairy tale "where the sisters were themselves 'beautiful and fair in appearance,'" Disney's
1950 film based on the story names the sisters Drizella (voiced by
Rhoda Williams) and Anastasia (voiced by
Lucille Bliss) and presents them as ugly and foolish. Southwest Texas State University's Department of English identifies various distinguishing characteristics of Drizella and Anastasia, such as exaggerated and naked feet emphasizing physical nature and a big bustle emphasizing clumsiness, which contrast with their more positively presented counterpart,
Cinderella. Disney describes them as simply "spoiled, awkward, and ungainly." In the two
direct-to-video sequels,
Cinderella II and
Cinderella III, it is revealed Anastasia is less cruel-intentioned than her older sister, stuck under her mother's thumb and acting out of frustration at not having love of her own. By the end of the third film, she has broken free of Lady Tremaine's evil influence, while her older sister remains unrepentantly on their mother's side. In the
2015 live-action iteration of the story, the stepsisters are played by
Sophie McShera (Drizella) and
Holliday Grainger (Anastasia). They are portrayed as beautiful in appearance with very over-the-top clothes. However, as their own mother admits, they are both incredibly stupid. They make fun of Cinderella, but do occasionally talk civilly to her. They mostly squabble among themselves, leaving the serious cruelty to their mother and even apologizing to their stepsister before they leave the kingdom at the end of the film. One reviewer described them as "The female equivalents of
Tweedle-Dee and Tweedle-Dum".
Rodgers and Hammerstein musical In 1957,
Rodgers and Hammerstein created a
musical version of Cinderella especially for television, later also adapted for the stage. The story more closely follows the Perrault version. The stepsisters in this version are named Joy and Portia, played by
Alice Ghostley and
Kaye Ballard respectively.
Shrek depictions Doris and
Mabel are ugly sisters in the films
Shrek 2 and
Shrek the Third. Both are voiced by men (
Larry King voiced Doris and
Regis Philbin voiced Mabel) and covered in lavish and poor applications of makeup, not unlike their usual portrayals in
pantomime. Mabel is a villain who sides with the evil Prince Charming's conquest of the kingdom of Far Far Away. Doris, in contrast, seems to be on friendly terms with the protagonists (including her stepsister Cinderella). Doris and Mabel reconcile in the end upon
Artie convincing the villains to not be villains after they were defeated by their respective opponents.
Once Upon a Time depictions In ABC's
Once Upon a Time, there is a total of five known versions of the stepsisters. In the first Storybook, the stepsisters are named Clorinda and Tisbe, portrayed by
Mekenna Melvin and Goldie Hoffman. They are based on the stepsisters from the Charles Perrault version of the fairytale, the operatic version, and the Disney version. However, another version of the stepsister from the Disney film, Anastasia, is not related to Cinderella and instead has a separate stepsister with a storyline that parallels Cinderella's. This version of the character is a primary antagonist of the spin-off series,
Once Upon a Time in Wonderland, and is portrayed by
Emma Rigby. In the second Storybook, the stepsisters retain their Disney names of Anastasia and Drizella, portrayed by Yael Yurman and
Adelaide Kane. Drizella is the main antagonist of the first half of the seventh season, while Anastasia dies prior to the start of the season, only to be revived. Both were members, though at different times, of the Coven of the Eight, a group of witches. They both eventually leave the Coven and reconcile, returning to the alternate Enchanted Forest. == Criticism ==