In another thread there was much discussion of how parents who pretend with their children that the princesses are real deal with the fact that more than one cast member plays each character. Some parents make what I'd call heroic efforts to make sure that their child isn't disillusioned.
My wife and I were talking about this last night, and now we're very curious about how other parents handle the subject of "real" princesses.
To us, princesses seem a little different that some other Disney characters in that they are, in a sense, historical (in the case of Pocahontas, literally so). So how does a parent who wants to keep the "reality" of a princess intact deal with the character's historicity? If your child was studying history and asked "is this when Sleeping Beauty's dad was king?" how would you answer? Do you, at some point, make clear that "reality" and "Disney reality" are two different things?
All of this came to mind because my wife worked at Renaissance Faire when she was a teenager, and there were some people working there who treated the place like the real world (they wouldn't discuss "back stage," etc.). Because the Faire had some characters who were playing real people (such as royalty), you had an odd situation in which a parent might tell their child that they had met Queen Elizabeth and encourage the child to believe it was true. To us, this seemed odd.
I don't want anyone to think I'm being disapproving or flaming or anything -- I'm really just curious. From the time he was very young, our son was only comfortable with Disney characters, Santa Claus, etc. if he knew they weren't real. Once he did, he could play along just fine (and, at age 7, still does). Because of this and because we don't do the "pretend it's real" thing with our son, this is just plain outside of our experience.
Thanks a bunch!
--Dominick
My wife and I were talking about this last night, and now we're very curious about how other parents handle the subject of "real" princesses.
To us, princesses seem a little different that some other Disney characters in that they are, in a sense, historical (in the case of Pocahontas, literally so). So how does a parent who wants to keep the "reality" of a princess intact deal with the character's historicity? If your child was studying history and asked "is this when Sleeping Beauty's dad was king?" how would you answer? Do you, at some point, make clear that "reality" and "Disney reality" are two different things?
All of this came to mind because my wife worked at Renaissance Faire when she was a teenager, and there were some people working there who treated the place like the real world (they wouldn't discuss "back stage," etc.). Because the Faire had some characters who were playing real people (such as royalty), you had an odd situation in which a parent might tell their child that they had met Queen Elizabeth and encourage the child to believe it was true. To us, this seemed odd.
I don't want anyone to think I'm being disapproving or flaming or anything -- I'm really just curious. From the time he was very young, our son was only comfortable with Disney characters, Santa Claus, etc. if he knew they weren't real. Once he did, he could play along just fine (and, at age 7, still does). Because of this and because we don't do the "pretend it's real" thing with our son, this is just plain outside of our experience.
Thanks a bunch!
--Dominick