Theatre • In
Marius Petipa's
ballet Sleeping Beauty, with music composed by
Tchaikovsky, the wicked fairy is named
Carabosse. She is portrayed as a frightening figure, entering each time to foreboding and dramatic music. Instead of the spinster being an innocent bystander, she is Carabosse in disguise. Not originally connected to the Sleeping Beauty story, the name Carabosse had previously appeared in
Madame d'Aulnoy's fairy tale
The Princess Mayblossom. • The ballet
The Sleeping Beauty in 1921, produced by
Sergei Diaghilev, employed the original choreography by
Marius Petipa as it was painstakingly recalled by several of its dancers, all now émigrés. Carabosse's costumes were designed by
Léon Bakst; her medieval-inspired costume gave her the
silhouette of a rat. • In
Matthew Bourne's 21st-century reimagining of the ballet, the king and queen, driven by despair, seek her help who gives them a daughter named Aurora; however, the king forgets to express his gratitude and she curses the child. Years later when Aurora is in her early twenties, Carabosse has died in exile but her son Caradoc attempts to exact revenge and seduce Aurora.
Film • In Disney's 1959 animated version of
Sleeping Beauty, the wicked fairy,
Maleficent is a dark, almost Satan-like figure who calls herself the "Mistress of all
Evil". When not invited to the royal christening, she lays a curse on the princess (named
Aurora here, as in Tchaikovsky's ballet) to die on her sixteenth birthday for not being invited to her christening. The third fairy weakens the curse to just fall into a deep sleep, but
the three good fairies still take baby Aurora with them to live in the woods for her protection. Meanwhile, her father, King Stefan, has ordered all spinning wheels in the country burned. Maleficent's monstrous minions hunt for Aurora for the next sixteen years and on her sixteenth birthday, Aurora returns to the palace and pricks her finger on the spindle of a spinning wheel magically conjured up by Maleficent. When Maleficent learns that Prince Phillip is in love with Princess Aurora, she captures him so that he will be too old and feeble when he can finally free Aurora. When the good fairies help him escape, Maleficent takes over the entire palace and later transforms into a giant black
dragon to do battle with the hero. Prince Phillip defeats the villainess with his Sword of Truth. • The 2014 film
Maleficent reinvented her as a tragic villain who curses Aurora to exact revenge against Aurora's father, King Stefan. Stefan broke Maleficent's heart and cut off her wings, an act of betrayal that turned her bitter and wicked. However, Maleficent starts to care for the child as if she were her daughter and begins to question her actions. In the end, it is a kiss of maternal love on Aurora's forehead that frees her from the curse, concluding Maleficent's path of redemption. The kiss given by the Prince moments prior was not shown as having been strong enough to wake Aurora. A sequel,
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil, was released in 2019. • The wicked fairy godmother is named
Odelia in
Jetlag Productions'
Sleeping Beauty. This version closely follows the original fairy tales. In the end, Prince Richard overcomes the many obstacles to reach the sleeping Princess Felicity and puts an end to Odelia's curse. Odelia is killed by the spirit of the seventh fairy godmother, who lost all powers to put the castle to sleep and spent a hundred years and one day as a pink-red rose.
Literature • In
Orson Scott Card's
Enchantment (1999),
Baba Yaga fills the role of the wicked fairy. • In
Robin McKinley's ''
Spindle's End'', the wicked fairy is named
Pernicia. Similar to the original fairy tale, Pernicia appears on the princess' name day and places a curse on the baby, claiming that the child will, on her 21st birthday, prick her finger on a spindle and fall into deathly sleep. A powerful fairy named Ikor switches the identities of the princess, named Rosie, and her best friend Peony, to break Pernicia's spell when Rosie turns 21. • In
Mercedes Lackey's
The Gates of Sleep (2002), the baby's paternal aunt
Arachne curses her to die on her 18th birthday, even though Arachne is not supposed to possess any magical ability at all. The girl, named Marina, remains hidden for 17 and a half years until Arachne murders her parents and takes Marina with her. At some point, the curse is broken but Arachne manages to re-instate the curse, resulting in a battle between Marina and Arachne. • Heather Walther's
Malice (2021) reimagines the Sleeping Beauty story with a romance between the princess and the evil sorceress characters. ==See also==