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Dreamchild
Released October 4, 1985
Duration 94 minutes
Director Gavin Millar
Written by Dennis Potter
Music Stanley Myers
Max Harris (additional music)
Studio EMI Films Ltd
Rated PG
Teaparty

A revision of the Mad Tea Party opens up in Mrs. Hargreaves' hotel room

Dreamchild-teaparty2
Dreamchild-creatureshop

Dreamchild tells the semi-biographical story of Charles Dodgson (aka Lewis Carroll) and his relationship with young Alice Liddell.

Caroll dedicated his books Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass, and What Alice Found There to Liddell, and her name was borrowed for the fictional Alice. The film focuses on an elderly Alice, now Mrs. Alice Hargreaves, visiting the United States for a Lewis Carroll centenary event, who flashes back to her friendship with Carroll, and is haunted by dreams of meeting the characters from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.

Jim Henson's Creature Shop was employed for the dream sequences, building lifelike puppets of characters like the Gryphon, the Mock Turtle, the Mad Hatter, the Dormouse, the Caterpillar, and the March Hare.

Dreamchild, which began shooting on July 16, 1984, is notable for being the first film project the Creature Shop worked on outside of the Henson company.[1] Early versions of cable controls were used, instead of the still early developmental animatronics.

The film was released in widescreen on DVD-R exclusively through Amazon.com in 2009, and received an HD transfer for Blu-ray in 2022.

Cast[]

  • Coral Browne as Alice Hargreaves
  • Peter Gallagher as Jack Dolan
  • Ian Holm as Reverend Charles L. Dodgson
  • Jane Asher as Mrs. Liddell
  • Nicola Cowper as Lucy
  • Caris Corfman as Sally
  • Amelia Shankley as Young Alice

Voice Cast[]

Puppeteers[]

  • Ron Mueck as the Gryphon
  • Steve Whitmire as the Mock Turtle / the Caterpillar
  • Karen Prell as the Dormouse
  • Big Mick as the Mad Hatter
  • Michael Sundin as the March Hare
  • Cheryl McFadden receives a mention of "Special Thanks" in the credits. She choreographed all of the creature scenes in the film, but was not allowed to receive credit as Choreographer due to a lack of union working papers.[2]

Creature Shop Credits[]

Reviews[]

A film about an aristocratic 87-year-old Englishwoman arriving in Manhattan in 1932 to receive an honorary doctorate from Columbia University, and also boasting some of Muppeteer Jim Henson's whimsical creatures, certainly has to be different...

An Art Deco Manhattan becomes as much a Wonderland for Mrs. Hargreaves as the one Dodgson invented for her so long before. These rude, slangy, overly familiar Americans seem to come at her from all directions. When all this hubbub and the city's immensity threaten to overwhelm and exhaust her to the point of inducing intimations of mortality, she begins to think about her long-ago childhood and about Dodgson, whom she "scarce remembers." In these moments she becomes not merely the 10-year-old Alice (pert Amelia Shankley), but also Alice in Wonderland as she encounters such beloved creatures as the Mad Hatter and the March Hare, which Jim Henson's Creature Shop brings to life with the charm of Sir John Tenniel's original drawings.
—Kevin Thomas. Los Angeles Times. October 18, 1985.

Particularly impressive here is the animatronics work of Jim Henson's Creature Shop (of The Muppets, The Dark Crystal, and The Empire Strikes Back fame). Henson has worked from the famous Tenniel drawings, but uses them as a basis for his own creation rather than attempting a slavish copy. Thus, for example, the Caterpillar (which Tenniel drew only from behind) is given a face, while creatures like the Gryphon, the Mad Hatter and the March Hare are more ferocious and less endearing than their originals. The Gryphon's grotesque quality has been emphasized by giving it the body of a man, the legs of a lion, and virtually no fur; the Hare has extremely dirty feral teeth and scars and flecks of blood on his neck (indicating the 'madness' that goes with the March mating season), while the Hatter (who seems curiously Semiticized) has all the symptoms of "Hatter's Shakes," a form of mercury poisoning which affected hatters and gave rise to the expression "mad as a hatter." Allied with Potter's additions to their various speeches, Henson's contributions make these figures less like harmless nursery-rhyme eccentrics and more like externalizations of the various fears and worries that beset Mrs. Hargreaves as she approaches death, trying simultaneously to cope with the alien present and to put the ambiguous past in order. As the Caterpillar says: "You are old, Mrs. Hargreaves."
—Julian Petley. Monthly Film Bulletin. January 1986.

Sources[]

  1. Jim Henson's Red Book "7/16/1984 – ‘Dreamchild begins shooting.’"
  2. New York Daily News "Gates McFadden on 'Star Trek,' Jim Henson and her new podcast" (YouTube) at 19:21, May 27, 2021
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