White Queen | |
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Alice character | |
First appearance | Through the Looking-Glass |
Created by | Lewis Carroll |
Portrayed by |
Anne Hathaway (Alice in Wonderland, Alice Through the Looking Glass) Emma Rigby (Once Upon a Time in Wonderland) |
Information | |
Species | Human |
Gender | Female |
Occupation | Queen |
Spouse(s) | White King |
Children | Lily (a pawn) |
Nationality | Looking-Glass Land |
Mirana the White Queen | |
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Alice in Wonderland (2010 film) character | |
Anne Hathaway as the White Queen in Tim Burton's 2010 adaptation
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Created by | Lewis Carroll & Tim Burton |
Portrayed by |
Anne Hathaway (adult) Amelia Crouch (child) |
Information | |
Full name | Mirana of Marmoreal |
Occupation | Queen of Wonderland |
Family | King Oleron (father) Queen Elsemere (mother) Iracebeth of Crims (sister) |
The White Queen is a fictional character who appears in Lewis Carroll's fantasy novel Through the Looking-Glass.
Along with her husband the White King, she is one of the first characters to be seen in the story. She first appears in the drawing room just beyond the titular looking-glass as an animate chesspiece unable to see or hear Alice, the main character. The Queen is looking for her daughter Lily; Alice helps her by lifting the White Queen and King onto the table, leading them to believe they were thrown up by an invisible volcano.
When Alice meets the Red Queen and joins the chess game, she takes the place of a white pawn, Lily being too young to play. She does not meet the White Queen as a human-sized character until the Fifth Square. The White Queen lives backwards in time, due to the fact that she lives through the eponymous looking glass. Her behaviour is odd to Alice. She offers Alice "jam to-morrow and jam yesterday - but never jam to-day." She screams in pain until, rather than because, she pricks her thumb on her brooch, and tells Alice of the King's messenger who has been imprisoned for a crime he will later be tried for and perhaps (but not definitely) commit in the end. The White Queen, aside from telling Alice things that she finds difficult to believe (one being that she is just over 101 years old) says that in her youth she could believe "six impossible things before breakfast" and counsels Alice to practice the same skill. The meeting ends with the Queen seeming to turn into a bespectacled sheep who sits at a counter in a shop as Alice passes into the next square on the board. The Sheep is somewhat different from the Queen in terms of personality and gets "more like a porcupine every time [Alice] looks at her" because she knits with several knitting needles all at once. Two of these needles turn into oars when Alice appears in a boat, and then reappear in the Sheep's shop, where Alice purchases an egg, which becomes Humpty Dumpty as she moves to the next square.