Alice - a young girl
The White Rabbit - Alice follows him into Wonderland
The Queen of Hearts - her favourite line is "Off with his head!"
The Cheshire Cat - can disappear gradually/all of a sudden and reappear
The March Hare - Alice meets him at the tea party at the Mad Hatter's house
The Mad Hatter - same as above
The Dormouse - also at the tea party; sleeps all the time
In the books by Lewis Carroll, Alice went to Wonderland only once; in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. In the sequel, Through the Looking Glass, the place she visits is called the Looking-glass World.Tim Burton's 2010 movie sees Alice making a return to visit to Wonderland, but it has been combined with the Looking-glass World and has been renamed Underland.
Both the 1951 animated Disney movie and the 2010 Tim Burton film are based on two books by Lewis Carroll; 'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland' and 'Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There' Confusingly, these books are also sometimes jointly referred to as 'Alice in Wonderland', and, even more confusingly, sometimes just the first book, 'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland' is referred to as 'Alice in Wonderland'.
the main characters are Alice, the queen of hearts, the mad hatter, the march hare, the caterpillar, tweedle Dee and tweedle dum, the flowers, dodo bird, the white rabbit, the cards, the king of hearts, the doorknob, and Alice's sister
The book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, is set on May 4th, but the year isn't specified.Lewis Carroll first made up the story on July 4th, 1862, and it was first published three years later on July 4th 1865.Disney's animated film version was released on July 26th, 1951, and Tim Burton's 3D version was released on March 5th, 2010.
Bonham Carter's head was digitally increased to three times its original size on screen because Tim Burton wanted a greater effect of the character upon the audience .
To read a brief analysis of three of Wonderland's characters, follow the Related Link below.
The three little sisters, Elsie, Lacie, and Tillie, lived in the Looking-Glass House in "Through the Looking-Glass," the sequel to "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" by Lewis Carroll. They are characters in the nursery rhyme "The Walrus and the Carpenter" that Alice encounters during her journey.
In his article 'Alice on the Stage', Lewis Carroll describes Alice as: loving, gentle, courteous, trustful, and curious.Follow the link below to read Carroll's original article
The hookah smoking caterpillar was described as being three inches tall, according to Lewis Carroll's "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland."
In the books by Lewis Carroll, Alice went to Wonderland only once; in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. In the sequel, Through the Looking Glass, the place she visits is called the Looking-glass World.Tim Burton's 2010 movie sees Alice making a return to visit to Wonderland, but it has been combined with the Looking-glass World and has been renamed Underland.
The Rabbit's three human characteristics which first attract Alice's attention are his ability to speak, that he has a pocket watch and that he has a waistcoat pocket to keep it in.
Alice is the hero of Alice in Wonderland. She is a seven year old girl, who lives in England in the 1860s.She was inspired by a real little girl named Alice Liddell, although Lewis Carroll, the author of the book, said that the character of Alice wasn't based on any real person.In the 1951 Disney animation, she was played by Kathryn Beaumont.
There are several answers to this question. As Lewis Carroll made up Alice in Wonderland as he went along, one afternoon in 1865, to entertain some children he knew, you could say that it took him no time at all to write it. One of the children loved the story and asked him to write it down for her. It took Carroll two years from when he was asked until he gave her the version he wrote down for her. He then decided to have the book published, so he edited, added to and rewrote the hand written version and it was finally published exactly three years after he first made up the story.
Attack the tower with the three cranks that appears in the middle.
The Caterpillar is three inches tall.`Well, I should like to be a LITTLE larger, sir, if you wouldn't mind,' said Alice: `three inches is such a wretched height to be.'`It is a very good height indeed!' said the Caterpillar angrily, rearing itself upright as it spoke (it was exactly three inches high).
Lewis Carroll wrote three versions of Alice in Wonderland. The first one he wrote was Alice's Adventures Under Ground, which was a hand written version of the story he told to Alice Liddell and her sisters during a rowing trip. It was published in 1986.The second version was Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. This was a lengthened version of the original, with new scenes added and illustrations by John Tenniel. It was actually published before Alice's Adventures Under Ground, in 1865, and is the version most of us know today.The third version Carroll wrote was The Nursery "Alice", which was written to be shorter and simpler, so that younger children could enjoy it. It was published in 1890.To read and compare the different versions online, follow the Related Links below
Lewis Carroll, whose real name was Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, wrote Alice In Wonderland during the Victorian era.He made up the story to entertain three young sisters, including Alice Liddell, on a rowing trip on July 4, 1862.Carroll presented Alice Liddell with the first, handwritten version of the story on November 26, 1864. It was called Alice's Adventures Under Ground.Alice's Adventures In Wonderland, the version we know today, was completed and published in 1865.