The Queen of Hearts
Alice was captured by The Red Queen's soldiers in Lewis Carroll's "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland."
Through the Looking Glass is the sequel to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. It is based on a giant chess game in which Alice begins as a pawn, but eventually becomes a queen.
Well, honey, in Lewis Carroll's "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland," Alice does temporarily become a queen during a chess game in the sequel "Through the Looking-Glass." So, technically, yes, she does become a queen, but it's all part of the whimsical and nonsensical world of Wonderland. Keep up, darling!
The White Queen is from Lewis Carroll's second Alice book, Through the Looking Glass.
Helena Bonham Carter plays the role .
The Cheshire Cat is usually thought of as the most agreeable character in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. He is not unpleasant to Alice and, during the croquet match, she goes so far as to describe him as a friend.
There is no reference to the Queen of Hearts having a nephew in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.The ace to ten of hearts are described as 'the royal children', but there is no other mention made of the Queen's relationship to her family.
The tarts belonged to the Queen of Hearts:'The Queen of Hearts, she made some tarts,All on a summer day:The Knave of Hearts, he stole those tarts,And took them quite away!'(Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, chapter XI)
There are no 'bad characters' as such in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - no villains, no bad guys - but the Duchess and the Queen of Hearts are the most unpleasant characters who Alice encounters.
Lewis Carroll is addressing the issue of tyranny in showing the queen of hearts.
from what I know, the queen is usually fat ( unless you have not read the books or watch the movies, you should NOT say something mean about others )
The king and queen in "Alice in Wonderland" have one child, the Knave of Hearts.