The Mirror Is The Prettiest
The Magic Mirror is a mystical object that is featured in the story of Snow White, depicted as either a hand mirror or a wall-mounted mirror.
Fairy tale [edit]
The Magic Mirror belongs to the Evil Queen, who constantly asks information technology – commonly in a rhyming phrase – who is the fairest in the land. When the mirror eventually identifies her young stepdaughter Snow White every bit the fairest, the Queen jealously tries to take her killed, first via her huntsman, then several personal attempts terminal with a poisoned apple. The mirror is key to her plots; it tells her Snowfall White's location, and afterward each attempt, she checks with the mirror and is again told that Snow White remains the fairest. At the very end, when Snow White is married, the mirror tells her that the young queen is the most beautiful. The Evil Queen is terrified but her jealousy drives her to attend the wedding, where she is caught and executed.
Assay [edit]
In other versions of the tale from around the globe, a person, an animal, or the moon may play the same role as the magic mirror, informing the villain that the heroine is more beautiful. The mirror has been interpreted equally the phonation of Snow White's male parent judging between the dazzler of his wife and daughter.[1]
Modern adaptations [edit]
Disney [edit]
Disney's Snow White franchise [edit]
The Magic Mirror appeared in Disney'due south Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs voiced by Moroni Olsen. The Magic Mirror contained an imprisoned spirit who is referred to as the Slave in the Magic Mirror. In his beginning appearance in the motion-picture show, the Evil Queen would consult with the Magic Mirror to ask who the fairest one of all was. The Magic Mirror always told the Evil Queen that she was the fairest ane of all. When asked who the fairest of all is, the spirit replies that, while the Queen is beautiful, a fairer being exists. When the Queen angrily asks for the girl's name, the spirit describes her, making information technology obvious to the Queen that Snow White is the i beingness referred to. The Queen so orders her Huntsman to kill Snowfall White and bring her back her heart. When the Evil Queen asks the Magic Mirror who the fairest of them all was later that evening, the Magic Mirror told her that Snowfall White was still the fairest of them all. Though the Queen at first believes the spirit to be incorrect and showed it the heart in question, she is told that she holds the heart of a squealer and that Snow White still lives in the Cottage of the Seven Dwarfs.
When the attraction Snow White'due south Scary Adventures was redone in 1994, the Magic Mirror is featured and voiced by Tony Jay.
The Magic Mirror appeared in Disney'southward House of Mouse, voiced again by Tony Jay. It is seen in the lobby of the lodge. The Magic Mirror would always answer questions given to him past the guests or give advice to the staff members. In the episode "House of Magic," Daisy accidentally makes the guests disappear causing Mickey to plow to the Magic Mirror for information on how to undo the spell. When the Magic Mirror gives a cryptic respond, Mickey asks him to repeat it once more in a way he tin sympathize it. The Magic Mirror tells him to check the prop basement for anything that can help them. As Mickey leads the staff to the basement, the Magic Mirror quotes that nobody wants to hear his cryptic answers anymore.
The Magic Mirror also appeared in Fantasmic! voiced again by Tony Jay.
The Magic Mirror appears in Kingdom Hearts: Birth by Slumber voiced by Corey Burton. The Magic Mirror first appears in Terra's storyline. As per the picture, it told the Queen that Snow White was now much fairer than the vain ruler. However, it added on that her heart was a pure lite than shone vivid. Information technology was then promised by the Evil Queen usage by Terra to observe Master Xehanort if he brought her Snow White's heart. However, he did not do and so and told the Evil Queen he never intended to. Terra then proceeds to tell her that different Snow White, she has much darkness in her eye. The Evil Queen, insulted and outraged, commanded the mirror to destroy Terra. The Magic Mirror refused saying it can simply answer questions. The Evil Queen'due south increasing rage so caused the Magic Mirror to have a potion slammed on its face sucking Terra in and fighting him. Nonetheless, the Spirit of the Magic Mirror is defeated and releases Terra. The Evil Queen reluctantly has the Magic Mirror tell Terra where he can notice Primary Xehanort. The Magic Mirror quotes "Beyond both light and dark he dwells, where war was waged upon the fells." Upon learning this data, Terra takes his go out from the Evil Queen and the Magic Mirror where the Magic Mirror's ambiguous response would direct Terra to the Keyblade Graveyard. The Magic Mirror later appears in Aqua's storyline. When Aqua looks for a cure for Snow White in the castle, the still-possessed Magic Mirror drags her into the mirror for a fight, merely she also manages to defeat the Spirit of the Magic Mirror and is released. The Magic Mirror states to Aqua "The Queen is gone, my service done. Adieu, oh victorious one." Afterwards that was quoted, the spirit within disappears leaving its mirror prison house to be just a normal mirror.
In the Disney Channel original motion-picture show Descendants, the Evil Queen has retained the Mirror subsequently her exile to the Isle of the Lost, reduced to a pocket-size mitt-mirror that is passed on to her daughter Evie. Although it is still controlled by rhymes spoken by the user and doesn't accept an inhabitant in it.
A different version of the Magic Mirror appeared in The 7D voiced by Whoopi Goldberg. This version is a female that serves Queen Delightful of Jollyland.
One time Upon a Time [edit]
In Once Upon a Fourth dimension, the Magic Mirror started out as a Genie (portrayed by Giancarlo Esposito) where he and his lamp were discovered by King Leopold. King Leopold feels no need to wish for anything and uses the get-go and 2d wishes to free the Genie from the lamp and to give the third wish to the Genie. The Genie expresses the desire to observe true dearest, and so King Leopold takes the Genie to his castle as he believes the Genie tin observe truthful love there. He falls in love with the King'south wife Queen Regina and gives her a hand mirror. The King reads in the Queen'south diary that she has fallen in love with the man who gave her the hand mirror and asks the Genie to locate him. The Queen is then locked in her room to prevent her from leaving the King. To gratuitous her, her father has the Genie bring her a locked box, which turns out to be filled with poisonous vipers from Agrabah so the Queen tin can kill herself. Instead, the Genie uses the vipers to kill King Leopold and allow the Queen to exist with him. She tells him that since the vipers were from his country, the guards will find out that he was the murderer and flee. Realizing the Queen never loved him, he uses his wish to be ever with her and to never leave her sight. This traps him in the hand mirror. As a spirit in the Magic Mirror, he is able to move between and meet through all other mirrors in the Enchanted Forest. He is used past Regina to spy on and locate others.
In Storybrooke, he is Sidney Drinking glass, a reporter for Storybrooke's local newspaper The Daily Mirror. On Regina's asking, he researches Emma Swan's past to help Regina miscarry her from Storybrooke. After Graham'due south expiry, Regina attempts to appoint him sheriff, just the wording of the town charter calls for an election. He loses the position to Emma Swan. Regina has him removed from the newspaper staff, and Sidney goes to Emma, claiming that he wants to expose Regina as the corrupt person she is. However, the exposé reveals Regina's attempts to amend the community. Despite this, Sidney tells Emma that he volition help her accept downward Regina, merely information technology is revealed that he is secretly in league with Regina, who is using Emma's trust in Sidney to gain leverage over Emma. Emma later learns that he planted a bug in a vase glass after it is used to tip off Regina upon discovering a key piece of bear witness that would accept cleared Mary Margaret Blanchard of Kathryn Nolan's murder. Emma confronts Sidney and realizes that he is in beloved with Regina. All the same, Emma presses him to assistance defeat Regina. However, after Kathryn is found alive, Sidney falsely confesses to kidnapping Kathryn and framing Mary Margaret then that he could "detect" Kathryn and become famous. Later, a cell labeled "S. Glass" is seen in the hospital basement's psychiatric ward. The name "South. Glass" is visible on a door in the showtime flavour finale, suggesting that Regina had locked him in the Storybrooke Infirmary'southward psychiatric ward after he confessed to the kidnapping. In "A Tale of Two Sisters," Regina frees Sidney Glass from the psychiatric ward to be her Mirror again to enlist him into helping become rid of the people that are in the middle of her happiness. Regina temporarily places Sidney in the mirror to detect the exact moment in which Maid Marian was apprehended by Regina's men. Regina later consults with Sidney on how to change fate. Regina tells Sidney that the villains in the volume don't become a happy ending and wants him to find the writer of the book so that she can make some changes like allowing the villains to get their happy endings. In "Breaking Glass," Regina has Sidney Drinking glass expect for the Snow Queen'due south hideout to force her into thawing Maid Marian from her freezing spell. When Emma arrives to know where Sidney Drinking glass is, Regina states that she's too busy to tell her where Sidney Drinking glass is. Sidney later reports to Regina about where the Snow Queen is hiding out subsequently his failed endeavour to get a leverage on Regina. Using a compact to remain in contact to Sidney Glass, Regina heads in the directions of the Snow Queen'southward hideout. Regina after admits that Sidney was in the mirror. Upon strong winds reaching Emma and Regina, Sidney states the Snow Queen had swayed him to her side as Elsa's ice bridge breaks. After Emma and Regina defeat a big Viking made of water ice, the Snow Queen takes the compact that Sidney is and retreats. At her hideout, the Snowfall Queen frees Sidney from the mirror as she wanted the mirror that he was trapped in to go with her mirror that she is putting together. The Snow Queen states that she wants the mirror that Sidney Drinking glass is in since information technology is filled with dark magic. Earlier declaring Sidney free, the Snow Queen advises Sidney to get a warm coat since it is "going to become cooler around here."
Other appearances [edit]
The 10th Kingdom [edit]
In the TV miniseries The 10th Kingdom, a magic mirror is a key chemical element of the plot, as protagonists Tony and Virginia Lewis travel from New York into the fairy-tale realm via a traveling mirror, which they later on lose and must spend the rest of the series searching for, while their enemy, the evil Queen and protégé of Snow White's deceased stepmother, spies on them with other magic mirrors. The travelling mirror that brought them to this world is destroyed in an accident, but an old mirror referred to as Gustav- which tin can only communicate and respond to queries made in rhyme- reveals that there were 2 other travelling mirrors fabricated, with one sunk at the bottom of the body of water and the other in the possession of the Queen. With the Queen's defeat, Virginia returns to New York through the Queen's travelling mirror, although Tony decides to remain in the fairy-tale realm to enjoy his new status as a hero.
Faerie Tale Theatre [edit]
The mirror in Faerie Tale Theatre was portrayed by Vincent Price, whose face appeared as if mounted on the top of the mirror (in reality, Cost stuck his face through a hole). This mirror, as did all of the Queen'south other mirrors, turned black every bit she found out that Snow White was alive.
Sesame Street [edit]
The Magic Mirror appeared in Episode 685 of Sesame Street with the Magic Mirror's face being the confront of Jerry Nelson. In the "Sesame Street News Flash" segment, Kermit the Frog interviews the Magic Mirror on which question the evil witch will inquire him and tells Kermit that it is the same question where the Snow White answer "drives her upward the wall." The witch asks the Magic Mirror who is the fairest in the land, has two beautiful eyes, is light-green, wearing a lid, wielding a microphone, and is in the aforementioned room as the Magic Mirror. The Magic Mirror states that Kermit the Frog is the fairest. The witch so notices Kermit the Frog hiding behind the curtain and states that he is good-looking.
Grimm's Fairy Tale Classics [edit]
The Magic Mirror appears in the "Snow White" episode of Grimm'due south Fairy Tale Classics voiced past Doug Lee in the English dub. Information technology is kept in a chiffonier in the Evil Queen'due south chambers. Similar the story, the Magic Mirror told the Evil Queen that she was the fairest of them all until the day when Snow White came of historic period. In this version when the Magic Mirror told the Evil Queen that the 7 Dwarfs freed Snowfall White from the mortiferous laces and that she can't be killed when she is in their protection, the Evil Queen breaks the Magic Mirror vowing to prove it wrong.
Happily Ever After [edit]
The Magic Mirror appeared as the Looking Glass in Happily Ever After voiced by Dom DeLuise. When Lord Maliss asks him where his sis the Evil Queen is and threatens it for information, the Looking Glass tells him that she has died trying to kill Snowfall White. Later on Snowfall White evaded Lord Maliss' dragon class, Lord Maliss consults the Looking Glass again as the Looking Drinking glass tells him that Snow White and the Dwarfelles are heading to Rainbow Falls. When Snow White ventures to Lord Maliss' castle, the Looking Drinking glass tells him that it will be tough for Snowfall White to discover his castle. When the Dwarfelles enter Lord Maliss' castle and wonder where Lord Maliss has taken Snow White, the Looking Drinking glass states that "beneath the Queen lies a hush-hush door." Subsequently searching the area, they find a panel to the subconscious door underneath the Evil Queen's bust.
Snow White (1990) [edit]
The Magic Mirror appears in the 1990 Snowfall White film voiced by Cam Clarke. He is shown equally an anthropomorphic hand mirror who would ofttimes try to get the Evil Queen not to ask who is the fairest one of all. At the stop of the movie following the Evil Queen'due south defeat, the Magic Mirror attended the wedding of Snow White and the Prince.
Snow White: A Tale of Terror [edit]
In Snowfall White: A Tale of Terror, this version has the mirror a belongings of Lady Claudia (portrayed by Sigourney Weaver). It is a wooden closet with a statue as the door and hands acting equally locks. It is regarded as a family unit heritage artifact by her. Snowfall White'south nanny tries to see what's within while cleaning it and immediately suffers a heart assail. The mirror displays a beautiful and younger version of Claudia who advises her what to practice. The mirror also contains her life force and she ages rapidly when Snow White stabs the mirror and and then engulfs in flame of the burning room.
Happily Ever Later: Fairy Tales for Every Child [edit]
In the Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child rendition of Snow White set to a Native American-theme, the Magic Mirror (voiced by Buffy Sainte-Marie) is a shiny flat rock. It told Sly Flim-flam that it was the fairest in the country until White Snow came of age. When White Snowfall was discovered to be alive and the first disguise try to do abroad with White Snow failed, the Magic Mirror used its powers to enable Sly Flim-flam to enter the spirit globe so that she can change her shape. Sly Trick uses the Magic Mirror's abilities to assume the form of White Snow's nanny Sage Flower to give her a poison apple. For the latest time, the Magic Mirror informed Sly Play tricks that White Snow even so lives and Sly Play a trick on is withal number two. When Sly Pull a fast one on is later on confronted the Chief Brownish Bear's tribe and the 7 Mystical Little Men for her treachery, Sly Fob enters the Magic Mirror and turns into a bear simply for the Seven Mystical Picayune Men to throw the Magic Mirror off a cliff trapping Sly Play tricks in the spirit world.
Shrek [edit]
The Magic Mirror appears in the Shrek franchise voiced by Chris Miller. It is depicted as a mirror with a live spirit communicating through information technology, and with magical displaying abilities.
- In Shrek, the Magic Mirror is first brought to Lord Farquaad who asks it if Duloc is not the most perfect kingdom, exactly the same way the Evil Queen used to ask it if she was not the fairest of all. The Magic Mirror and so presents Lord Farquaad with three princesses that he tin marry (from which he chooses Fiona). This is done in a parody of Blind Appointment.
- It is afterwards seen to exist with Shrek's posse who in Shrek 2 apply it as a tv such every bit announcing that the show volition be back after commercials.
- In Shrek Forever After, Rumpelstiltskin has it and uses information technology on television broadcasting purposes.
The Suite Life [edit]
A parody version of the Magic Mirror appears equally a recurring character throughout The Suite Life of Zack & Cody voiced by Brian Peck. Information technology is a high tech mirror that oft compliments London Tipton'south attire.
A direct representation of the Magic Mirror in The Suite Life on Deck episode "Once Upon A Suite Life" voiced by Michael Airington. It is seen when all the characters are dreaming of themselves in the classic fairytales such as Snow White, Jack and the Beanstalk, and Hansel and Gretel.
The Hunters [edit]
In the 2013 SyFy film The Hunters, it is revealed that the Magic Mirror was inspired by a fabled mirror that is said to grant the wish of whoever looks into information technology; supposedly, the mirror triggered the Dark Ages. The mirror was sought by an aboriginal army known as the Krugen before the hunters – a group of scientist knights defended to protecting fairy-tale artefacts – acquired the mirror, breaking off four shards from the mirror and hiding them and the mirror away when destroying information technology completely proved impossible. The film focuses on a family of hunters, the Flynns, with the parents being experienced hunters seeking the shards to keep them abroad from the Krugen and their sons existence forced to take up the hunt when their parents go missing. The mirror is eventually reassembled past the film's antagonist, but he is tricked into making a wish that caused the mirror to destroy him, with the protagonists subsequently wishing for the mirror to destroy itself.
The Huntsman film series [edit]
In Snowfall White and the Huntsman, the Magic Mirror appears equally a golden gong-like mirror that oozes out a hooded robed being (voiced by Christopher Obi) whenever Queen Ravenna chosen upon information technology for information, although evidently, the being is only visible to Ravenna, every bit her henchmen observe her talking to thin air. The Magic Mirror first appeared where he told Queen Ravenna that Snowfall White was coming to the age where she will be more fair than Queen Ravenna. The Mirror is last seen when Snow White defeats Ravenna, ending the Evil Queen'southward rule.
In prequel/sequel, The Huntsman: Winter's State of war, the Magic Mirror (voiced by Fred Tatasciore) is revealed to concur darker forms of magic. He is seen in flashbacks of Queen Ravenna'southward tyrannical reign, where information technology tells Ravenna that her sis Freya will give nascency to a child who will exceed Ravenna's beauty as the fairest of them all. The Mirror also predicts that if the child was to be harmed, Freya volition unleash powers, prompting Ravenna to orchestrate the murder of her own niece, both to preserve her own beauty and, in her own twisted way, help her sister. Freya, in horror at her discovery, releases icy powers that kill her lover and turns her hair white. Years later, after Ravenna's death, the Magic Mirror has gone missing while travelling to a Sanctuary where Snow White believes its evil can exist contained. Information technology is revealed to exist in the hands of a troll in a forest, but Freya, seeking the mirror for herself, orders Sara- the Huntsman's presumed-dead married woman- to retrieve it. Although Sara obeys this order, she tricks Freya past sparing Eric's life. Freya's subsequent attempt to use the Mirror herself reveals that Ravenna had subconscious a part of herself in the mirror, restoring her to a form of life apparently formed of the Mirror's gilt while still appearing human. In the final confrontation, Freya learns the truth about her sister's function in the death of her girl (Ravenna was at present the mirror spirit and was thus bound to answer Freya's questions truthfully), prompting her to help Eric in destroying the Mirror at the toll of her own life. However, the final scene shows a gold raven flying away, suggesting that a role of the mirror – and thus Ravenna – may accept survived.
Mirror Mirror [edit]
In the film Mirror Mirror, elements of the Magic Mirror are featured as a large mirror that serves as a portal to the Mirror House where Queen Clementianna consults with the Mirror Queen (portrayed by Lisa Roberts Gillian and voiced by Julia Roberts whose paradigm was used for the character). To access the portal to the Mirror House, Queen Clementianna quotes "Mirror Mirror on the Wall." The Mirror Queen ever advises Queen Clementianna not to employ dark magic for her own gain. Queen Clementianna keeps asking her what is this price that she is talking about. The Mirror Queen in one case provided a honey potion to Queen Clementianna to brand the Male monarch fall in love with her and so briefly turned Brighton into a cockroach. When Snow White destroys the necklace around the Beast which turns it dorsum into the King, Queen Clementianna starts to age as the Mirror Queen asks if she is set to learn the price of magic. After the anile Queen Clementianna takes the slice of an apple tree she was to requite to Snow White from her, the Mirror Queen declares that it was Snow White's story all forth as the Mirror Firm shatters alongside the big mirror leading to information technology.
Princesses [edit]
In Jim C. Hines' Princesses serial – chronicling the adventures of Snow White with Princess Danielle Whiteshore (Cinderella) and erstwhile Princess Talia Malak-el-Dahshat (Sleeping Beauty) later their tales ended with Snow and Talia being banished from their kingdoms and taken in past Danielle'south mother-in-law – Snow White is a sorceress who uses her mother'southward mirror as a key focus of her spells, relying on various smaller mirrors to maintain a link to information technology when away from the palace; her power is commonly focused by using various rhymes every bit spells, although she can create other spells without speaking. The fourth novel, The Snow Queen's Revenge, reveals that the magic mirror was created past Snowfall White'due south mother imprisoning a demon and binding information technology to her service. The plot suggests that the mirror's role in the original story was motivated by the demon attempting to create a set of circumstances that would allow it to escape, inspiring Snowfall'southward female parent to attack her girl and so that Snow would inherit the mirror and some mean solar day make a mistake that would permit the demon out. In the novel The Snow Queen's Revenge, the mirror shatters after Snow tries to perform a particularly complex spell, allowing the demon within information technology to possess Snow while shards of the mirror decadent others, forcing Danielle and Talia to render to Snow'south kingdom in the hopes of rediscovering the secrets used by Snow White'southward mother to bind the demon in the starting time place so that they can try and exorcise it from Snowfall. After this plan proves impossible due to the demon's interference, the demon attempts to recreate a larger ice-mirror to summon further demons into this earth, using the part-fairy blood of Danielle's son Jakub – Danielle having some fairy blood in her from her mother's side of the family – but a reflection of Snow's untainted self helps protect her friends long enough for them to destroy the demon, at the cost of Snow'southward life.
Simon the Sorcerer [edit]
Near the end of the video game Simon the Sorcerer, the role player tin employ the Magic Mirror in Sordid's tower equally a surveillance monitor, using any reflecting surface like a camera.[2]
Sinister Squad [edit]
Although the magic mirror does non announced directly in the Aviary film Sinister Squad, it is referenced as a primal office of the film's backstory; when Rumpelstiltskin destroyed the mirror to prevent the forces of Death challenge it, information technology transferred several fairy-tale characters into our earth, with Rumpelstiltskin relying on fragments of the mirror to sustain his ain magical manipulation abilities until the final confrontation with Death.
Sisters Grimm [edit]
In the Sisters Grimm serial by Michael Buckley, the Magic Mirror appears equally a modest protagonist in the first half-dozen books, but is revealed to be the master antagonist in book seven and remains evil until near the terminate of book nine.
Snow White: The Fairest of Them All [edit]
Here, the wicked queen Elspeth possesses a hall of magic mirrors, and a manus mirror that displays several attributes not seen earlier. The Queen may control the hand mirror to terminate enemies (every bit she did to the Huntsman), utilise it as a means of transport or step through it to alter appearances, even turning others into animals.
The Wolf Amidst U.s.a. [edit]
Actualization as a magical object in the Business Office, the Magic Mirror is a minor protagonist in The Wolf Among United states voiced past Gavin Hammon. Usually enervating its request be given to information technology in rhyme course, the Magic Mirror is capable of showing a brief vision of its requested subject. The Magic Mirror's shattering and the search for its missing shard play key aspects following the terminate of the 2nd episode.
Ever After High [edit]
In the E'er After High series of books, webisodes, and made-for-TV movies the magic mirror is a very important part of the series' story. In the series, the Evil Queen is banished to live from inside the mirror as punishment for her Curses against the lands of Ever Later on and Wonderland.
Red Shoes and the Seven Dwarfs [edit]
The Magic Mirror appears in the Snow White parody Red Shoes and the Vii Dwarfs voiced by Patrick Warburton.
Magic Mirror-inspired tourism [edit]
German chemist and fairy-tale parodist Karlheinz Bartels suggests, in a natural language-in-cheek way, that the German folk tale "Snowfall White" is influenced by Maria Sophia Margaretha Catherina von und zu Erthal, who was born in Lohr am Main in 1725.[three] After the death of Maria Sophia's nativity female parent in 1738, her father Philipp Christoph von und zu Erthal took a 2d wife.[4]
Lohr Castle, which was one time owned past Philipp Christoph, featured a large mirror which has been connected to the Evil Queen'due south iconic mirror and which tin still be viewed in that location today. Information technology was a production of the Lohr Mirror Manufacture (Kurmainzische Spiegelmanufaktur) and may have been in the castle every bit early as 1719, when Philipp Christoph took part.[5] The mirror "talked" via inscribed aphorisms. The upper right corner is labeled "Flirtation Propre" or "cocky-love," and the left corner reads "Pour la recompense et cascade la peine" ("for advantage and for punishment"). Mirrors from Lohr were and so elaborately worked that they were accorded the reputation of "e'er speaking the truth". They became a favorite souvenir at European crown and aristocratic courts.[6]
Bartels's theory, which is "admittedly a joke of its inventor," is not taken seriously by scholarly experts.[7]
Magic Mirror-inspired technology [edit]
In 2017, Amazon announced Echo Look, a "fashion assistant" camera that helps catalog your outfits and rates your look based on "machine learning algorithms with advice from fashion specialists".[8]
References [edit]
- ^ Tatar, Maria (2003). The Hard Facts of the Grimms' Fairy Tales. Princeton University Press. p. 234. ISBN0691114692.
- ^ Chance Soft. Simon the Sorcerer.
- ^ Karlheinz Bartels: Schneewittchen – Zur Fabulologie des Spessarts. Second Edition, Lohr 2012, publisher: Geschichts- und Museumsverein Lohr a. Main, the local historical society, ISBN 978-iii-934128-forty-eight; cf. an academic review by Theodor Ruf: Die Schöne aus dem Glassarg. Schneewittchens märchenhaftes und wirkliches Leben. Würzburg: Königshausen und Neumann, 1994, p. 12ff, 49ff; ISBN iii-88479-967-3.
- ^ Werner Loibl: Der Vater der fürstbischöflichen Erthals – Philipp Christoph von und zu Erthal (1689–1748), Aschaffenburg 2016, ISBN 978-3-87965-126-nine.
- ^ Wolfgang, Vorwerk (2015). "Das 'Lohrer Schneewittchen': Zur Fabulologie eines Märchens" (PDF). Paremiology, Folklore, Language, and Literature: 491–503.
- ^ Werner Loibl, Dice kurmainzische Spiegelmanufaktur Lohr am Main in der Zeit Kurfürst Lothar Franz von Schönborn (1698–1729), p.277f, in the catalogue: Glück und Glas, Zur Kulturgeschichte des Spessarts, Munich, 1984; Loibl is the foremost skillful in the history of 17th and 18th-century glasshouses in Germany, according to Dedo von Kerssenbrock-Krosigk, formerly Curator of European Glass at the Corning Museum of Glass (Corning, NY), since 2008 Director of the Hentrich Museum of Glass (Düsseldorf, Germany). Cf. now the history of the 17th- and 18th-century glasshouses in Lohr and in the Spessart written by Werner Loibl: Die kurmainzische Spiegelmanufaktur Lohr am Principal (1698–1806) und die Nachfolgebetriebe im Spessart, 3 volumes, Aschaffenburg 2012, ISBN 978-three-87965-118-4.
- ^ Kawan, Christine Shojaei (2005–2006). "Innovation, Persistence and Cocky-Correction: The Case of Snow White" (PDF). Estudos de Literatura Oral. 11–12: 238.
- ^ "Amazon'south new $200 camera volition judge how you look". The Verge. 26 April 2017. Retrieved 26 Apr 2017.
The Mirror Is The Prettiest,
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_Mirror_%28Snow_White%29
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