Peter Pan

For other uses, see Peter Pan (disambiguation). Statue of Peter Pan in St. John's, Newfoundland

Peter Pan is a fictional character created by Scottish author J. M. Barrie, and the name of a stage play, a children's book, and various adaptations of them. The character is a little boy who refuses to grow up, and spends his time having magical adventures.

Storyline

J. M. Barrie wrote three works involving Peter Pan:

  • "Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens," which is a segment of his book The Little White Bird (1902)
  • The stage play Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up (1904)
  • Peter and Wendy (1911), later retitled Peter Pan, a novel for children based on the play.

Several sequels, adaptations, and spinoffs have emerged since then, all with slightly modified storylines.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens

In this story, Peter Pan escapes from being a human at the tender age of seven days. He, having been a bird before he was a boy, believed he was still a bird, and so he flew out the window to the Kensington Gardens. He soon discovered that something was a bit off about him, so he flew to the island in the Serpentine where all the birds-who-become-children are born.

At the island, he asks the wise old bird Solomon what is wrong -- and Solomon explains that he is now a little boy. Peter is quite horrified, and then for a moment he doubts whether he can fly any more, and so he cannot. Perfect faith is to have wings.

Peter grows up on the island -- that is to say, he spends a very long time on the island-- but he always wishes he could go back to the Kensington Gardens and play as little girls and boys do. So one day, all the thrushes on the island build Peter a huge nest that he can use as a boat. And from then on, Peter goes to the Gardens at night to play, just as real boys do in the daytime.

Peter makes friends with the fairies in the Gardens, and he plays on his pipes for them at their dances and ceremonies. So the fairies grant him a wish of his heart -- and Peter asks to go back to his mother. So the fairies give him the ability to fly, and off he goes straight to his mother, who he finds is very sad -- and Peter knows why. But he cannot bring himself to leave behind his boat and the fairies and his fun in the Gardens, and so he flies away, planning to come back later. But Peter is having too much fun to hurry back; and when he finally does fly home, the window is barred and his mother has a new little boy to love.

Peter spends a very long time as a little boy in the Gardens, playing without ceasing but never knowing that he was doing it all wrong, that is, until he meets a little girl named Maimie, who remains in the Garden after Lock-Out. Maimie helps precipitate a fairy wedding, and so she finds favor with the fairies, who build her a little house for the night. And in the morning, she meets Peter Pan, who asks her to marry him after a touching scene in which kisses are confused with thimbles, as in the stage play. Maimie agrees, but then Peter seems to like her fur coat (for a nest) better than her, and she remembers her mother -- and the long and short of it is that she goes back to her family. But she leaves Peter a present a little while later -- an imaginary goat, which she asks the fairies to turn into a real goat. It is thus that Peter acquired the goat he rides on in the Gardens.

Every night, Peter rides around the Gardens, looking for lost children, and if he finds them, he puts them in a fairy house. Sometimes he is too late, and then he buries them (in twos, so that they should not be lonely) and carves a tombstone for them. The story ends, "I do hope Peter is not too ready with his spade. It is all rather sad."

Peter and Wendy

Later renamed to Peter Pan.

This is the portion of J. M. Barrie's mythos of Peter Pan that is best known to most readers.

In both the play and the novel, Peter invites the girl Wendy Darling to the Neverland to be a mother for his gang of Lost Boys. Her brothers John and Michael come along. Many adventures ensue, including the near-death of the fairy Tinker Bell, and a climactic confrontation with Peter's nemesis, the pirate Captain Hook of the pirate ship the Jolly Roger. In the end, Wendy decides that her place is at home, and brings all the boys back to London. Peter remains in the Neverland, and Wendy grows up.

Background

Barrie created Peter Pan in stories he told to the sons of his friend Sylvia Llewelyn-Davies, with whom he had forged a special relationship, while both were married.

The character's name comes from two sources: Peter Llewelyn-Davies, at the time the youngest of the boys, and Pan, the mischievous Greek god of the woodlands. Mrs. Llewelyn-Davies' death from cancer came within a few years of the death of her husband. Barrie was named as co-guardian of the boys and unofficially adopted them.

It has also been suggested that the inspiration for the character was Barrie's elder brother David, whose death in a skating accident at the age of thirteen deeply affected their mother. According to Andrew Birkin, author of J.M. Barrie and the Lost Boys, the death was "a catastrophe beyond belief, and one from which she never fully recovered . . . If Margaret Ogilvy drew a measure of comfort from the notion that David, in dying a boy, would remain a boy for ever, Barrie drew inspiration."

Maude Adams as Peter in an early stage production

Peter Pan first appeared in print in a 1902 book called The Little White Bird, a fictionalised version of Barrie's relationship with the Llewelyn Davies children, and was then used in a very successful stage play, Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up, which premiered in London on December 27, 1904.

In 1906, the portion of The Little White Bird which featured Peter Pan was published as the book Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens, with illustrations by Arthur Rackham. Barrie then adapted the play into the 1911 novel Peter and Wendy (but most often now published simply as Peter Pan).

There are seven statues of Peter Pan playing a set of pipes, cast from a mold by sculptor George Frampton, following an original commission by Barrie. The statues are in Kensington Gardens in London, in Liverpool, in Brussels, in Camden, New Jersey, in Perth, in Toronto, and in Bowring Park in St. John's, Newfoundland.

Wendy

Barrie is sometimes said to have "invented" the name Wendy with this story. Barrie's friend poet William Henley called Barrie "Friend" but Henley's daughter Margaret aged 4 could only pronounce that as "My Fweiendy" or "Fwendy-Wendy".

In fact, the name was already in use in both the United States and Britain, but was extremely rare. The Peter Pan stories popularized the name, at first in Britain. Wendy is related to the Welsh name Gwendolyn, and was used by Barrie at a time when Welsh names were making a resurgence in England.

Themes

The most apparent thematic thread in the story concerns growing up (or not), with the character of Peter wanting to remain a child forever in order to avoid the responsibilities of adulthood. "Peter Pan syndrome" has become a psychiatric term named by Dr. Dan Kiley to describe an adult who is afraid of commitment and/or refuses to act his age. It is also sometimes used to positively describe an innocent, childlike approach to life.

Along with the theme of "growing up" is the theme of death and innocence. Barrie's tale is intricately tied to the real Davies boys and the deaths of both mother and father.

Mr. Darling is constantly troubling himself with 'adult' matters. He is constantly fussing over money and respect, yet he never even attempts to hide his immaturity, because he is simply unaware of it. Peter too is like this. He is the leader of the Lost Boys because he is the bravest and the 'smartest.' But whenever anything is brought up that he does not understand he dismisses it and makes it seem inferior. Barrie is making a point: being egotistical will bring you down, not up. There is a reason why there are only lost boys and not lost girls. Girls have more sense then to be arrogant; they see the significance in growing up and maturity. Barrie is making another point: there is nothing wrong with being childish, being egotistical is the problem. If Mr. Darling represents the negative aspects of being childish, Mrs. Darling personifies when acting like a child is acceptable. she has nothing against childish acts, only immature acts. Her own personality is one of a child's, yet it is made up of the positive traits of a child. Wendy is also like her mother. She chooses to grow up, rather than staying in Neverland. Mr. Darling, along with Peter, are both immature, arrogant, and selfish. They have made their decision not to grow up.

Peter and Wendy form a contrast between childhood and maturity. Peter Pan remains a child in mind because he cannot feel pain because of death affecting him or those around him. Peter has one emotion only: gladness, and occasionally he adds to that childish fury. He forgets anything that is not happy and lighthearted soon after the fact: "I always forget them after I kill them."

Most of the movie adaptations of Peter Pan add a romantic aspect to the story that is not present in the novel. Wendy's flirtatious (by contemporaneous standards) desire to kiss Peter, his desire for a mother figure, his conflicting feelings for Wendy, Tiger Lily and Tinker Bell (each representing different female archetypes), and the symbolism of his fight with Captain Hook (traditionally played by the same actor as Wendy's father), all could possibly hint at a Freudian interpretation (see Oedipus Complex).

Adaptations

Peter Pan has been adapted for stage and screen many times. Following the example of Barrie's original stage version, and for practical reasons (and perhaps tradition), Peter usually - but not always - has been played by an adult woman.

Captain Hook fends off the crocodile in the first film version of Peter Pan

Paramount Pictures released the first film version of Peter Pan in 1924, a silent movie starring Betty Bronson as Peter and Ernest Torrence as Hook.

Mary Martin as Peter

Several musical versions of the play have been produced, of which the best known are Jerome Kern's 1924 version, Leonard Bernstein's 1950 version, and the 1954 version mounted by Jerome Robbins (originally to have only a few incidental songs with music by Mark Charlap and lyrics by Carolyn Leigh, but evolved into a musical with additional music by Jule Styne and lyrics by the team of Betty Comden and Adolph Green). The 1954 version became widely known as a vehicle for Mary Martin and later for a series of female gymnasts, including Cathy Rigby. The 1954 version was restaged for television by NBC and broadcast in 1955 as a historic, live color television event. The television version survives, as it was put to videotape in 1960.

Disney's Peter with the Lost Boys

On February 5, 1953, Disney released its animated film version of Peter Pan with music by Sammy Cahn, Frank Churchill, Sammy Fain, and Ted Sears. 15-year-old film actor Bobby Driscoll supplied the voice of Peter. In the film, a visual reference is made to Peter's ties to the Pan of Greek mythology by showing him absentmindedly playing the Pan pipes (also called panflute), which the nature spirit was famous for playing.

The 1979 stage version starred Broadway and television actress Sandy Duncan.

P. J. Hogan's 2003 live-action film version Peter Pan is notable for being the first film to cast a young teenage boy (Jeremy Sumpter) to portray Peter. Wendy was played by Rachel Hurd-Wood and Hook by Jason Isaacs, who also plays the role of the Darling children's father.

Sequels

There have been several additions to Peter Pan's story created, both authorised and not.

Gilbert Adair's novel Peter Pan and the Only Children was published in 1987. It has Peter living with a new gang of Lost Boys under the ocean, recruiting children who fall from passing ships as new members.

In 1989, Nippon Studios released an anime version, Peeta Pan no Bouken, as part of its World Masterpiece Theater series. The first 23 episodes are a loose adaptation of Barrie's story, while the latter half of the series introduces a completely original arc with new supporting characters. Takashi Nakamura, chief animator of Akira, did the character design for this project.

In 1990, Fox Studios released the short-lived cartoon series Peter Pan and the Pirates, about the daily adventures of Peter, Wendy, and the Lost Boys. Voice talents in the cast included Jason Marsden as Peter and Tim Curry as Captain Hook. Curry won an Emmy for his performance. The series is notable for drawing much of its characterization from the original book and play, particularly Captain Hook and his henchman Smee, so that they are not one-dimensional villains but complex, even ambiguous figures.

In 1990, French artist Regis Loisel began a series of comic books titled Peter Pan, which constitute a bawdy, violent prequel to Barrie's work, and give Peter Pan's backstory a distinctly Dickensian flavor. The series consists of six volumes.

Steven Spielberg's 1991 film Hook has a grown-up Peter (played by Robin Williams) lured back to Neverland by Tinker Bell (Julia Roberts) to fight the returned Captain Hook (Dustin Hoffman).

J.E. Somma published After the Rain: A New Adventure for Peter Pan in 2001. It is set in modern times, and tells of Peter's reaction to a world that has grown to neglect him, and his rescue by three children who teach him that it's OK to grow up.

In 2002, Disney released Return to Neverland, a sequel to the 1953 Disney adaptation, in which Wendy's daughter Jane becomes involved with Peter Pan. This sequel is set during the Blitz, and deals with the issue of children being forced to grow up too fast.

Hyperion Books (a subsidiary of Disney) published the 2004 book Peter and the Starcatchers by humorist Dave Barry and suspense writer Ridley Pearson. It is an unofficial prequel to the story of Peter and Wendy, set on a ship called Never Land. In 2005, the publisher announced plans by Disney to adapt the book as a digitally animated movie, and to publish a sequel to it entitled Peter and the Shadow Thieves and a series of five chapter books titled The Never Land Adventures, the first two of which—Escape from the Carnivale and Cave of the Dark Wind—are planned to be released in Fall 2006.

Also in 2004, Karen Wallace's Wendy hit the stands. Supposedly a prequel to the events in Peter Pan, it is an attempt to justify the Darling children's willingness to fly away with Peter on the grounds that their home life, up to shortly before Peter appeared, had been filled with abuse and tragedy: a cruel nanny, a criminally irresponsible father, a suggestion of insanity in the family.

In 2005, James V. Hart published the book Capt. Hook by arrangement with Great Ormond Street Hospital. The book details the history of 15-year old James Matthew, young Oppidian Scholar and future Captain Hook. The book portrays the villainous youth in a sympathetic light.

Also in 2005, Great Ormond Street Hospital announced that Geraldine McCaughrean had been chosen to write a hospital-authorised sequel to Barrie's novel. Her book has the provisional title Captain Pan.

Other references in entertainment

Kate Bush's 1978 album Lionheart includes the song "In Search of Peter Pan".

In 1980, Petula Clark starred in Never Never Land as a woman whose niece, captivated by Barrie's tale, runs away and takes refuge with a group of "lost boys" squatting in a deserted London townhouse.

The 1987 Joel Schumacher film The Lost Boys featured several teen actors as ageless vampires, loosely styled after the lost boys of Peter Pan.

The 1997 comic book mini-series The Lost by Marc Andreyko and Jay Geldhof starred a vampiric boy hustler named Peter who leads a small group of vampire boys, and lures a girl named Wendy to join them.

The 1990s animated series The Mask included a character named "Skillet", who didn't age, dressed in green, could fly, and had a detatchable shadow. However, he was a villian, and sent his shadow out to absorb the youth of other people. Skillet's name was presumably based on "pan" as a cooking utensil.

Finding Neverland, a 2004 film starring Johnny Depp as Barrie and Kate Winslet as Sylvia Llewelyn Davies, was a somewhat fictionalized account of their relationship and how it led to the development of Peter Pan. It was based on the 1998 play The Man Who Was Peter Pan by Allan Knee.

The Disney version of Peter Pan also appeared in the 2002 video game Kingdom Hearts.

Copyright status

The copyright status of Peter Pan varies from one jurisdiction to another, and is disputed in at least one of them. The question is complicated somewhat by the various versions in which the story has been published. For example, elements introduced in the earliest versions of the story by Barrie may be in public domain in a given jurisdiction, but elements introduced in later editions or adaptations might not. For example, Disney holds the copyright for the character designs, songs, etc. introduced in the 1953 animated film, but not for the characters themselves.

European Union

Great Ormond Street Hospital (to which Barrie assigned the copyright as a gift before his death) claims full copyright in the European Union until the end of 2007. In the 1990s, the term of copyrights was standardised throughout the EU (see Directive on harmonising the term of copyright protection) to extend 70 years after the creator's death. Although Peter Pan was considered public domain in some jurisdictions at that time, this provision placed it back under copyright protection.

United Kingdom

The U.K. copyright for Peter Pan originally expired at the end of 1987 (50 years after Barrie's death), but was reestablished through 2007 by the European Union directive. Additionally, in 1988 the government had enacted a perpetual extension of some of the rights to the work, entitling the hospital to royalties for any performance or publication of the work. This is not a true perpetual copyright, however, as it does not grant the hospital creative control nor the right to refuse permission. Nor does it cover the Peter Pan sections of The Little White Bird, which pre-dates the play. The exact phrasing is in section 301 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988:

301. The provisions of Schedule 6 have effect for conferring on trustees for the benefit of the Hospital for Sick Children, Great Ormond Street, London, a right to a royalty in respect of the public performance, commercial publication, broadcasting or inclusion in a cable programme service of the play 'Peter Pan' by Sir James Matthew Barrie, or of any adaptation of that work, notwithstanding that copyright in the work expired on 31 December 1987. ([1])

United States

The conversion of U.S. copyright terms from a fixed number of years following publication, to an extending number of years following the creator's death, has introduced confusion over Peter Pan's copyright status. Great Ormond Street Hospital claims that U.S. legislation effective in 1978 and again in 1998 extended their copyright until 2023. Their claim is based on the copyright for the play script for Peter Pan, which was not published until 1928. By then, the character of Peter Pan had appeared in three previously published books, the copyrights of which have since expired.

GOSH's claim is contested by various parties, including Disney, who had cooperated with the hospital previously, but in 2004 published Dave Barry's and Ridley Pearson's Peter and the Starcatchers without permission or royalty payments. The Library of Congress catalog states that the original edition of Peter and Wendy was published in 1911, and Disney asserts that that material, like any other work published before 1923, was already in the public domain at the time of these extensions, and was therefore ineligible to be extended.

A dispute between the hospital and writer J.E. Somma over the U.S. publication of her sequel After the Rain, was settled out of court in March 2005. GOSH and Somma issued a joint statement which characterized her novel as "fair use" of the hospital's "U.S. intellectual property rights". Their confidential settlement does not set any legal precedent, however. [2]

Other jurisdictions

The original versions of Peter Pan are in the public domain in Australia and in Canada (where Somma's book was first published without incident).

Controversy

Like many other works of fiction from the era (such as the works of Rudyard Kipling and Mark Twain), the Peter Pan canon contains much material which is likely to be construed as offensive to modern audiences. Specifically, the books have been accused of both racism and sexism. The former charge primarily concerns the portrayal of Native Americans in Peter and Wendy--the portrayal is highly stereotypical, with Native Americans being shown as warlike primitives who speak in guttural tones. Barrie's treatment of female characters has also been criticized by modern readers--most of the female characters in Peter and Wendy (Wendy, Tinker Bell, Tiger Lily, and the mermaids) fawn after Peter Pan (and Tinker Bell makes several attempts on Wendy's life out of jealousy), yet Peter ignores all of their affections.

This criticism is also levelled against several more recent adaptations of the story; most notably the 1953 Disney film. The film contains a song often criticized as offensive, namely What Makes The Red Man Red?, a catalog of Native American stereotypes. Until the 2002 release of the DVD version of this film (which included all of the allegedly offensive content, uncensored), it was widely speculated that Disney's Peter Pan would meet the same fate as the film version of Song of the South, which has heretofore been withheld (by Disney) from the United States market on the grounds that it is racist.

Many authors of recent adaptations of Peter Pan (as well as virtually all of the modern "sequels") have chosen to soften (or eliminate altogether) the harsh portrayal of Native Americans. The 2003 film version directed by P. J. Hogan has been noted for going to the opposite extreme; several reviewers have criticized it for being excessively politically correct. The Disney sequel, Return to Neverland, features a heroine (Wendy's daughter Jane) who, rather than being a passive "damsel in distress", is fully capable of defending herself (and saving Peter from the clutches of Captain Hook). It should also be noted that in this sequel, no actual Native Americans are actually seen, only alluded to in a scene where flying over Neverland, Jane sees a tee-pee with smoke rising out of it.


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It should also be noted that in this sequel, no actual Native Americans are actually seen, only alluded to in a scene where flying over Neverland, Jane sees a tee-pee with smoke rising out of it. Sometimes a mixture of clay and lime was used—not very successfully—in the earliest pottery. The Disney sequel, Return to Neverland, features a heroine (Wendy's daughter Jane) who, rather than being a passive "damsel in distress", is fully capable of defending herself (and saving Peter from the clutches of Captain Hook). In the preceding pre-pottery Neolithic, vessels made of stone, gypsum, and burnt lime (vaiselles blanches or white ware) had been used. Hogan has been noted for going to the opposite extreme; several reviewers have criticized it for being excessively politically correct. Before that, clay had been used to make statuettes of humans and animals that were sometimes burned as well. J. In Palestine, Syria, and south-eastern Turkey, the earliest finds of clay pots date from Neolithic times, around the 8th millennium BC (black burnished ware).

The 2003 film version directed by P. The earliest Neolithic Pottery is from Gulf of Cambay, India, about 10000 years Before Present. Many authors of recent adaptations of Peter Pan (as well as virtually all of the modern "sequels") have chosen to soften (or eliminate altogether) the harsh portrayal of Native Americans. These objects may be good candidates for the earliest pottery in the world. Until the 2002 release of the DVD version of this film (which included all of the allegedly offensive content, uncensored), it was widely speculated that Disney's Peter Pan would meet the same fate as the film version of Song of the South, which has heretofore been withheld (by Disney) from the United States market on the grounds that it is racist. Recently underwater research in Gulf of Cambay, India revealed sun dried pottery dating from 30,000 BP(article in 6 parts, Badrinarayan 2005). The film contains a song often criticized as offensive, namely What Makes The Red Man Red?, a catalog of Native American stereotypes. Pottery found in the Japanese islands has been dated, by uncalibrated radiocarbon dating, to around the 11th millennium BC, in the Japanese Palaeolithic at the beginning of the Jomon period.

This criticism is also levelled against several more recent adaptations of the story; most notably the 1953 Disney film. These cult like objects have long been considered among the oldest pottery. Barrie's treatment of female characters has also been criticized by modern readers--most of the female characters in Peter and Wendy (Wendy, Tinker Bell, Tiger Lily, and the mermaids) fawn after Peter Pan (and Tinker Bell makes several attempts on Wendy's life out of jealousy), yet Peter ignores all of their affections. The most famous of these clay objects is the "Venus" of Dolni Vestonice. The former charge primarily concerns the portrayal of Native Americans in Peter and Wendy--the portrayal is highly stereotypical, with Native Americans being shown as warlike primitives who speak in guttural tones. Pottery objects, dated to the late Palaeolithic (Magdalenian, have been found in Europe. Specifically, the books have been accused of both racism and sexism. The relative chronologies based on pottery are essential for dating the remains of non-literate cultures and help in the dating of some historic cultures as well.

Like many other works of fiction from the era (such as the works of Rudyard Kipling and Mark Twain), the Peter Pan canon contains much material which is likely to be construed as offensive to modern audiences. Broken pottery in archaeological sites, called potsherds, help identify the resident culture and date the stratum, by the formation style and decoration. The original versions of Peter Pan are in the public domain in Australia and in Canada (where Somma's book was first published without incident). Potters also take advantage of more modern innovations in the fields of chemistry and plastics. [2]. The creation of pottery has been advanced as new tools became available to the potter, such as the electric potter's wheel and the electric kiln. Their confidential settlement does not set any legal precedent, however. Pottery is an ancient technology, and is one of the key technologies in the formation of civilization.

intellectual property rights". All pottery items go through a series of stages during construction. GOSH and Somma issued a joint statement which characterized her novel as "fair use" of the hospital's "U.S. However, because of the low temperature, it is an extremely quick and easy technique to do, and the clay has a distinctive black color. publication of her sequel After the Rain, was settled out of court in March 2005. The finished products of this process are not suitable for functional use, as the clay remains porous and may have some toxic chemicals held within it as a result of burning the surrounding woodchips or paper used to smother it. Somma over the U.S. This can be done in an enclosed container, which allows the supply of oxygen to be cut off and reduction to take place.

A dispute between the hospital and writer J.E. The kiln is heated to a low temperature, usually no higher than cone 06, and then ware is pulled out of the kiln while still hot (using tongs, of course) and smothered in ashes, paper, or woodchips. The Library of Congress catalog states that the original edition of Peter and Wendy was published in 1911, and Disney asserts that that material, like any other work published before 1923, was already in the public domain at the time of these extensions, and was therefore ineligible to be extended. The Western adaptation of Raku firing, a traditional Japanese technique, has enjoyed a deal of popularity due to its relative ease. GOSH's claim is contested by various parties, including Disney, who had cooperated with the hospital previously, but in 2004 published Dave Barry's and Ridley Pearson's Peter and the Starcatchers without permission or royalty payments. Wood firing is frequently time-consuming, as the kiln must be stoked for days, but the pieces which emerge often have characteristic patches of orange color on the clay itself, known as "blushing". By then, the character of Peter Pan had appeared in three previously published books, the copyrights of which have since expired. An example of a wood fired kiln is the Chinese Anagama, also adopted and used by Korean and Japanese potters.

Their claim is based on the copyright for the play script for Peter Pan, which was not published until 1928. Wood firing is another type of firing which involves using wood, rather than gas or electricity as in most modern kilns, to heat the kiln's interior. legislation effective in 1978 and again in 1998 extended their copyright until 2023. These techniques can have very unusual and frequently unexpected results whether used on an unglazed piece or in combination with normal glazing. Great Ormond Street Hospital claims that U.S. Colors generally depend on what chemical is added to the kiln. copyright terms from a fixed number of years following publication, to an extending number of years following the creator's death, has introduced confusion over Peter Pan's copyright status. Such substances will stick to pieces within the kiln and melt onto their surfaces, often resulting in a mottled texture which has a distinctive "orange peel" feel.

The conversion of U.S. Sulphur is commonly used, as are various salts or ashes. ([1]). Most of these involve heating the kiln to a high temperature and then delivering an amount of dry chemical into the kiln's interior. The provisions of Schedule 6 have effect for conferring on trustees for the benefit of the Hospital for Sick Children, Great Ormond Street, London, a right to a royalty in respect of the public performance, commercial publication, broadcasting or inclusion in a cable programme service of the play 'Peter Pan' by Sir James Matthew Barrie, or of any adaptation of that work, notwithstanding that copyright in the work expired on 31 December 1987. A number of various firing techniques can be used in addition to normal glaze-firing. 301. Kilns can either be "oxidized" by opening a port to allow oxygen into the interior or "reduced" by closing off the kiln from outside air to attain colors as desired.

The exact phrasing is in section 301 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988:. Some clays and glazes are oxygen-sensitive, most notably those containing iron and copper, and will change colour depending on the presence of oxygen during the firing. Nor does it cover the Peter Pan sections of The Little White Bird, which pre-dates the play. With all glazed items, a small part of the item (usually on the base of the piece) must be left unglazed, else it will stick to the kiln during firing. This is not a true perpetual copyright, however, as it does not grant the hospital creative control nor the right to refuse permission. Brushing tends not to give very even covering, but can be effective with a second coating of a coloured glaze as a decorative technique. Additionally, in 1988 the government had enacted a perpetual extension of some of the rights to the work, entitling the hospital to royalties for any performance or publication of the work. Glaze may be applied by dusting it over the clay, spraying, dipping, trailing or brushing on a thin slurry of glaze and water.

copyright for Peter Pan originally expired at the end of 1987 (50 years after Barrie's death), but was reestablished through 2007 by the European Union directive. This is important for functional earthenware vessels, which would otherwise be unsuitable for holding liquids due to porosity. The U.K. Compositions are varied but are usually a mixture of minerals that fuse at temperatures lowers than the body itself. Although Peter Pan was considered public domain in some jurisdictions at that time, this provision placed it back under copyright protection. Glazing is the process of coating the piece with a thin layer of material that during firing forms a glass coating. In the 1990s, the term of copyrights was standardised throughout the EU (see Directive on harmonising the term of copyright protection) to extend 70 years after the creator's death. This is particularly useful if the base clay is not of the desired colour or texture.

Great Ormond Street Hospital (to which Barrie assigned the copyright as a gift before his death) claims full copyright in the European Union until the end of 2007. Often slips/engobes used in this process have a higher silica content, sometimes approaching a glaze recipe. introduced in the 1953 animated film, but not for the characters themselves. If done carefully, one colour of slip can be fired before a second is applied prior to the scratching or incising decoration. For example, Disney holds the copyright for the character designs, songs, etc. Sgraffito involves scratching through a layer of coloured slip to reveal a different colour or the base clay underneath. For example, elements introduced in the earliest versions of the story by Barrie may be in public domain in a given jurisdiction, but elements introduced in later editions or adaptations might not. Many pre-historic and historic cultures used slip as the primary decorating material on their ware.

The question is complicated somewhat by the various versions in which the story has been published. Slip produced to a specific recipe is sometimes called an engobe. Slips or engobes can be applied by painting techniques, or the piece can be dipped for a uniform coating. The copyright status of Peter Pan varies from one jurisdiction to another, and is disputed in at least one of them. To give a finer surface, or a coloured surface, slip can be coated onto the leather-dry clay. The Disney version of Peter Pan also appeared in the 2002 video game Kingdom Hearts. Finer clays give a smoother and shinier surface than coarser clays, as will allowing the pot to dry more before burnishing, although that risks breakage. It was based on the 1998 play The Man Who Was Peter Pan by Allan Knee. Burnishing, like the metalwork technique of the same name, involves rubbing the surface of the piece with a polished surface (typically wood, steel, or stone), to smooth and polish the clay.

Finding Neverland, a 2004 film starring Johnny Depp as Barrie and Kate Winslet as Sylvia Llewelyn Davies, was a somewhat fictionalized account of their relationship and how it led to the development of Peter Pan. Members of commercial clay 'families' often have a similar chemical composition and a similar shrinkage rate, and can be used together. Skillet's name was presumably based on "pan" as a cooking utensil. The different coloured clays can then be joined without significant structural problems. However, he was a villian, and sent his shadow out to absorb the youth of other people. It is best to select a light neutral clay body, and then add a colourant to separate portions of the same body. The 1990s animated series The Mask included a character named "Skillet", who didn't age, dressed in green, could fly, and had a detatchable shadow. Although in principle any clays can be combined, differing rates of drying/shrinkage and expansion in firing create structural difficulties.

The 1997 comic book mini-series The Lost by Marc Andreyko and Jay Geldhof starred a vampiric boy hustler named Peter who leads a small group of vampire boys, and lures a girl named Wendy to join them. Coloured clay can also be added to a base clay after it is centered on the wheel. The 1987 Joel Schumacher film The Lost Boys featured several teen actors as ageless vampires, loosely styled after the lost boys of Peter Pan. This method is most commonly used for handbuilt pieces. In 1980, Petula Clark starred in Never Never Land as a woman whose niece, captivated by Barrie's tale, runs away and takes refuge with a group of "lost boys" squatting in a deserted London townhouse. Different colours of clay are lightly kneaded or slapped together before being formed into a vessel or decorative item. Kate Bush's 1978 album Lionheart includes the song "In Search of Peter Pan". The Japanese term for this technique is nerikome. Agateware and the other varieties of 'mottled' ware are made by combining two or more colours or varieties of clay into one completed piece.

Her book has the provisional title Captain Pan. In Japan, various techniques for combining coloured clay on the potter's wheel are jointly known as "neriage." An analogue of marquetry can also be made, by pressing small blocks of coloured clays together, and using the resulting mosaic to create distinctive patterns. Also in 2005, Great Ormond Street Hospital announced that Geraldine McCaughrean had been chosen to write a hospital-authorised sequel to Barrie's novel. In traditional studio pottery in Great Britain, these techniques were known as agateware. The name is derived from the agate stone, which shows bands of colours. The book portrays the villainous youth in a sympathetic light. Throughout history, potters have used a mixture of coloured clays as a distinctive decorating technique. The book details the history of 15-year old James Matthew, young Oppidian Scholar and future Captain Hook. Combustible particles can be mixed with clay or pressed into the surface to produce texture.

Hook by arrangement with Great Ormond Street Hospital. Colorants, usually metal oxides and carbonates, are added singly or in combinations to achieve a desired colour. Hart published the book Capt. Various coarse additives, such as sand and grog (fired clay which has been finely ground) give the final product strength and texture, and contrasting colored clays and grogs result in patterns. In 2005, James V. Additives can be worked into moist clay, prior to forming, to produce desired characteristics to the finished ware. Supposedly a prequel to the events in Peter Pan, it is an attempt to justify the Darling children's willingness to fly away with Peter on the grounds that their home life, up to shortly before Peter appeared, had been filled with abuse and tragedy: a cruel nanny, a criminally irresponsible father, a suggestion of insanity in the family. This method is commonly used for smaller decorative pieces such as figurines, which have many intricate details.

Also in 2004, Karen Wallace's Wendy hit the stands. After drying the finished piece is removed from the mould, "fettled" (trimmed neatly), and allowed to air-dry. In 2005, the publisher announced plans by Disney to adapt the book as a digitally animated movie, and to publish a sequel to it entitled Peter and the Shadow Thieves and a series of five chapter books titled The Never Land Adventures, the first two of which—Escape from the Carnivale and Cave of the Dark Wind—are planned to be released in Fall 2006. A liquid clay body slip is poured into plaster moulds, the permeability of the mould drawing water from the slip to leave a layer the clay body of the internal shape of the mould. It is an unofficial prequel to the story of Peter and Wendy, set on a ship called Never Land. Slipcasting is one technique for mass-production, and ideally suits shapes that can not be made by other methods. Hyperion Books (a subsidiary of Disney) published the 2004 book Peter and the Starcatchers by humorist Dave Barry and suspense writer Ridley Pearson. Jiggering is the process used to produce flatware, such as plates whilst jolleying is a similar technique but is for hollowware such as bowls.

This sequel is set during the Blitz, and deals with the issue of children being forced to grow up too fast. Although these techniques have been in use since the 18th century, they are usually considered minor "industrial" methods by modern studio potters. In 2002, Disney released Return to Neverland, a sequel to the 1953 Disney adaptation, in which Wendy's daughter Jane becomes involved with Peter Pan. A tool is used to shape the inside of a piece, pressing the outside against a solid mould. It is set in modern times, and tells of Peter's reaction to a world that has grown to neglect him, and his rescue by three children who teach him that it's OK to grow up. A solid mould is used to form the inside of the piece. Somma published After the Rain: A New Adventure for Peter Pan in 2001. A jigger is a mould that is slowly brought down onto the outside of an object, while it is being turned on a wheel.

J.E. There are two related techniques that improve repeatability of wheelwork. Steven Spielberg's 1991 film Hook has a grown-up Peter (played by Robin Williams) lured back to Neverland by Tinker Bell (Julia Roberts) to fight the returned Captain Hook (Dustin Hoffman). The piece must be re-centered to allow trimming of the foot of the pot to create a smooth and well-defined surface. The series consists of six volumes. The thrown piece is first allowed to dry to the leather-hard state then it is returned to the potter's wheel, usually with the rim down. In 1990, French artist Regis Loisel began a series of comic books titled Peter Pan, which constitute a bawdy, violent prequel to Barrie's work, and give Peter Pan's backstory a distinctly Dickensian flavor. Pottery that is thrown on the wheel is often finished in a process known as trimming.

The series is notable for drawing much of its characterization from the original book and play, particularly Captain Hook and his henchman Smee, so that they are not one-dimensional villains but complex, even ambiguous figures. Often, thrown pieces are further modified by having handles, lids, feet, spouts, and other functional aspects added using the techniques of handworking. Curry won an Emmy for his performance. These pieces can then be altered by impressing, bulging, carving, fluting, faceting, incising, and other methods to make them more visually interesting. Voice talents in the cast included Jason Marsden as Peter and Tim Curry as Captain Hook. Because of its nature, wheel work can only be used to initially create items with radial symmetry on a vertical axis. In 1990, Fox Studios released the short-lived cartoon series Peter Pan and the Pirates, about the daily adventures of Peter, Wendy, and the Lost Boys. Wheel work takes a lot of technical ability, but a skilled potter can produce many virtually identical plates, vases, or bowls in a day.

Takashi Nakamura, chief animator of Akira, did the character design for this project. The process of pressuring the clay into a rotational symmetry, so that it does not move from side to side as the wheel head rotates is referred to as "centering" the clay—usually the most difficult skill to master for beginning potters. The first 23 episodes are a loose adaptation of Barrie's story, while the latter half of the series introduces a completely original arc with new supporting characters. The wheel revolves rapidly while the clay is pressed, squeezed, and pulled gently into shape. In 1989, Nippon Studios released an anime version, Peeta Pan no Bouken, as part of its World Masterpiece Theater series. This disk is referred to as a bat. It has Peter living with a new gang of Lost Boys under the ocean, recruiting children who fall from passing ships as new members. Oftentimes, a disk of plastic, wood, or plaster is affixed to the wheel head, and the ball of clay is attached to the disk rather than the wheel head so that the finished piece can be removed easily.

Gilbert Adair's novel Peter Pan and the Only Children was published in 1987. The process of making ceramic ware on the potter's wheel is called "throwing" or "turning." A ball of clay is placed in the center of a turntable, called the wheel head, which is turned chiefly using foot power (a kick wheel or treadle wheel) or a variable speed electric motor. There have been several additions to Peter Pan's story created, both authorised and not. The potter's wheel can be used for mass production, although often it is employed to make individual pieces. Wendy was played by Rachel Hurd-Wood and Hook by Jason Isaacs, who also plays the role of the Darling children's father. These methods are often referred to as "handbuilding". Hogan's 2003 live-action film version Peter Pan is notable for being the first film to cast a young teenage boy (Jeremy Sumpter) to portray Peter. Doing handwork enables the potters to use their imagination to create one-of-a-kind works of art.

J. No two pieces of handwork will be exactly the same, so it is not suitable for making precisely matched sets of items such as dinnerware. P. Handwork methods are the most primitive and individual techniques, where pieces are constructed from hand-rolled coils, slabs, ropes, and balls of clay, often joined with a liquid clay slurry, or slip. The 1979 stage version starred Broadway and television actress Sandy Duncan. Slipcast pieces tend not to be, as that negates one of the prime advantages of casting. In the film, a visual reference is made to Peter's ties to the Pan of Greek mythology by showing him absentmindedly playing the Pan pipes (also called panflute), which the nature spirit was famous for playing. It's very common for wheel-worked pieces to be finished by handwork techniques.

15-year-old film actor Bobby Driscoll supplied the voice of Peter. There are three basic categories of forming techniques used in pottery—handwork, wheel work, and slipcasting. On February 5, 1953, Disney released its animated film version of Peter Pan with music by Sammy Cahn, Frank Churchill, Sammy Fain, and Ted Sears. The potter's most basic tool is his or her hands, however many of their tools have been created over the long history of pottery, including the potter's wheel, various paddles, shaping tools (or ribs), slab rollers, and cutting tools. The television version survives, as it was put to videotape in 1960. A person who makes pottery is traditionally known as a potter. The 1954 version was restaged for television by NBC and broadcast in 1955 as a historic, live color television event. Ceramic technology is used for items such as electronic parts and Space Shuttle tiles.

The 1954 version became widely known as a vehicle for Mary Martin and later for a series of female gymnasts, including Cathy Rigby. Porcelain is a very refined, smooth, white body that, when fired to vitrification, can have translucent qualities. Several musical versions of the play have been produced, of which the best known are Jerome Kern's 1924 version, Leonard Bernstein's 1950 version, and the 1954 version mounted by Jerome Robbins (originally to have only a few incidental songs with music by Mark Charlap and lyrics by Carolyn Leigh, but evolved into a musical with additional music by Jule Styne and lyrics by the team of Betty Comden and Adolph Green). Fine earthenware with a white tin glaze is known as faience. Paramount Pictures released the first film version of Peter Pan in 1924, a silent movie starring Betty Bronson as Peter and Ernest Torrence as Hook. Clay formulated to be fired at higher temperatures, which is partially vitrified is called stoneware. Following the example of Barrie's original stage version, and for practical reasons (and perhaps tradition), Peter usually - but not always - has been played by an adult woman. Pottery that is fired at temperatures in the 800 to 1200 °C range, which does not vitrify in the kiln but remains slightly porous is often called earthenware or terra cotta.

Peter Pan has been adapted for stage and screen many times. Traditionally, different world regions have produced different types of clay, also called bodies, with the potter digging clay out of natural banks in his own 'back yard.' In modern times, potters will often combine different clays and minerals to produce clay bodies suited to their specific purposes. Wendy's flirtatious (by contemporaneous standards) desire to kiss Peter, his desire for a mother figure, his conflicting feelings for Wendy, Tiger Lily and Tinker Bell (each representing different female archetypes), and the symbolism of his fight with Captain Hook (traditionally played by the same actor as Wendy's father), all could possibly hint at a Freudian interpretation (see Oedipus Complex). Aesthetic and artistic considerations have often been part of the formation of the pottery vessels, however modern mass production techniques have replaced the traditional role of pottery with mechanized reproduction, which has in turn caused the potter to be more focused on the aesthetic than the utilitarian in industrialized nations. Most of the movie adaptations of Peter Pan add a romantic aspect to the story that is not present in the novel. . He forgets anything that is not happy and lighthearted soon after the fact: "I always forget them after I kill them.". The formed clay, or piece, may be "bisque fired" in a kiln to induce permanent changes that result in increased mechanical strength, and then fired a second time after adding a glaze or a piece may be once fired by applying appropriate glaze to the dry unfired clay and firing in one cycle.

Peter has one emotion only: gladness, and occasionally he adds to that childish fury. The production of pottery is a process where wet clay is shaped and allowed to dry. Peter Pan remains a child in mind because he cannot feel pain because of death affecting him or those around him. Pottery is a ceramic material, where the clay mixed with other minerals is formed into vessels, generally with utilitarian purposes in mind. Peter and Wendy form a contrast between childhood and maturity. These pieces are called once-fired. They have made their decision not to grow up. Some pieces are not bisque-fired before being glazed.

Darling, along with Peter, are both immature, arrogant, and selfish. This is decorated with glaze and then fired again to a higher temperature. Mr. used. She chooses to grow up, rather than staying in Neverland. Biscuit ware is normally a plain red, white, or brown colour depending on which type of initial raw materials. Wendy is also like her mother. Depending on historic tradition the biscuit firing can be higher or lower in temperature than the final firing.

Her own personality is one of a child's, yet it is made up of the positive traits of a child. Once it has been fired, the clay is known as biscuit ware or bisque. she has nothing against childish acts, only immature acts. The greenware is often given a preliminary firing in a kiln. Darling personifies when acting like a child is acceptable. This is most often done to give a coloured base for decoration, other than the colour of the main clay. Darling represents the negative aspects of being childish, Mrs. Sometimes the greenware is given a coating of a clay slip.

If Mr. Greenware items are occasionally sanded with fine grade sandpaper to ensure a smooth finish in the completed item. Barrie is making another point: there is nothing wrong with being childish, being egotistical is the problem. Items of greenware are very brittle but they can be handled with care. Girls have more sense then to be arrogant; they see the significance in growing up and maturity. At this stage it is known as greenware. There is a reason why there are only lost boys and not lost girls. The piece is allowed to air dry until it is hard and dry to the touch.

Barrie is making a point: being egotistical will bring you down, not up. This condition is called leather hard. He is the leader of the Lost Boys because he is the bravest and the 'smartest.' But whenever anything is brought up that he does not understand he dismisses it and makes it seem inferior. This process is done when the piece has stiffened enough to survive manipulation. Peter too is like this. Work that is thrown on the wheel often needs to be trimmed or turned to make its thickness uniform and/or to form a foot on the piece. He is constantly fussing over money and respect, yet he never even attempts to hide his immaturity, because he is simply unaware of it. Water is used to keep the clay flexible during construction and to keep it from cracking.

Darling is constantly troubling himself with 'adult' matters. It is then shaped either by hand or using tools such as a potter's wheel, an extruder, or a slab roller. Mr. The raw clay is treated either manually or using a machine called a pug, to make homogenise moisture content and remove air bubbles. Barrie's tale is intricately tied to the real Davies boys and the deaths of both mother and father. Along with the theme of "growing up" is the theme of death and innocence.

It is also sometimes used to positively describe an innocent, childlike approach to life. Dan Kiley to describe an adult who is afraid of commitment and/or refuses to act his age. "Peter Pan syndrome" has become a psychiatric term named by Dr. The most apparent thematic thread in the story concerns growing up (or not), with the character of Peter wanting to remain a child forever in order to avoid the responsibilities of adulthood.

Wendy is related to the Welsh name Gwendolyn, and was used by Barrie at a time when Welsh names were making a resurgence in England. The Peter Pan stories popularized the name, at first in Britain. In fact, the name was already in use in both the United States and Britain, but was extremely rare. Barrie's friend poet William Henley called Barrie "Friend" but Henley's daughter Margaret aged 4 could only pronounce that as "My Fweiendy" or "Fwendy-Wendy".

Barrie is sometimes said to have "invented" the name Wendy with this story. John's, Newfoundland. The statues are in Kensington Gardens in London, in Liverpool, in Brussels, in Camden, New Jersey, in Perth, in Toronto, and in Bowring Park in St. There are seven statues of Peter Pan playing a set of pipes, cast from a mold by sculptor George Frampton, following an original commission by Barrie.

Barrie then adapted the play into the 1911 novel Peter and Wendy (but most often now published simply as Peter Pan). In 1906, the portion of The Little White Bird which featured Peter Pan was published as the book Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens, with illustrations by Arthur Rackham. Peter Pan first appeared in print in a 1902 book called The Little White Bird, a fictionalised version of Barrie's relationship with the Llewelyn Davies children, and was then used in a very successful stage play, Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up, which premiered in London on December 27, 1904. If Margaret Ogilvy drew a measure of comfort from the notion that David, in dying a boy, would remain a boy for ever, Barrie drew inspiration.".

Barrie and the Lost Boys, the death was "a catastrophe beyond belief, and one from which she never fully recovered . According to Andrew Birkin, author of J.M. It has also been suggested that the inspiration for the character was Barrie's elder brother David, whose death in a skating accident at the age of thirteen deeply affected their mother. Barrie was named as co-guardian of the boys and unofficially adopted them.

Llewelyn-Davies' death from cancer came within a few years of the death of her husband. Mrs. The character's name comes from two sources: Peter Llewelyn-Davies, at the time the youngest of the boys, and Pan, the mischievous Greek god of the woodlands. Barrie created Peter Pan in stories he told to the sons of his friend Sylvia Llewelyn-Davies, with whom he had forged a special relationship, while both were married.

Peter remains in the Neverland, and Wendy grows up. In the end, Wendy decides that her place is at home, and brings all the boys back to London. Many adventures ensue, including the near-death of the fairy Tinker Bell, and a climactic confrontation with Peter's nemesis, the pirate Captain Hook of the pirate ship the Jolly Roger. Her brothers John and Michael come along.

In both the play and the novel, Peter invites the girl Wendy Darling to the Neverland to be a mother for his gang of Lost Boys. Barrie's mythos of Peter Pan that is best known to most readers. M. This is the portion of J.

Later renamed to Peter Pan. It is all rather sad.". The story ends, "I do hope Peter is not too ready with his spade. Sometimes he is too late, and then he buries them (in twos, so that they should not be lonely) and carves a tombstone for them.

Every night, Peter rides around the Gardens, looking for lost children, and if he finds them, he puts them in a fairy house. It is thus that Peter acquired the goat he rides on in the Gardens. But she leaves Peter a present a little while later -- an imaginary goat, which she asks the fairies to turn into a real goat. Maimie agrees, but then Peter seems to like her fur coat (for a nest) better than her, and she remembers her mother -- and the long and short of it is that she goes back to her family.

And in the morning, she meets Peter Pan, who asks her to marry him after a touching scene in which kisses are confused with thimbles, as in the stage play. Maimie helps precipitate a fairy wedding, and so she finds favor with the fairies, who build her a little house for the night. Peter spends a very long time as a little boy in the Gardens, playing without ceasing but never knowing that he was doing it all wrong, that is, until he meets a little girl named Maimie, who remains in the Garden after Lock-Out. But Peter is having too much fun to hurry back; and when he finally does fly home, the window is barred and his mother has a new little boy to love.

But he cannot bring himself to leave behind his boat and the fairies and his fun in the Gardens, and so he flies away, planning to come back later. So the fairies give him the ability to fly, and off he goes straight to his mother, who he finds is very sad -- and Peter knows why. So the fairies grant him a wish of his heart -- and Peter asks to go back to his mother. Peter makes friends with the fairies in the Gardens, and he plays on his pipes for them at their dances and ceremonies.

And from then on, Peter goes to the Gardens at night to play, just as real boys do in the daytime. So one day, all the thrushes on the island build Peter a huge nest that he can use as a boat. Peter grows up on the island -- that is to say, he spends a very long time on the island-- but he always wishes he could go back to the Kensington Gardens and play as little girls and boys do. Perfect faith is to have wings.

Peter is quite horrified, and then for a moment he doubts whether he can fly any more, and so he cannot. At the island, he asks the wise old bird Solomon what is wrong -- and Solomon explains that he is now a little boy. He soon discovered that something was a bit off about him, so he flew to the island in the Serpentine where all the birds-who-become-children are born. He, having been a bird before he was a boy, believed he was still a bird, and so he flew out the window to the Kensington Gardens.

In this story, Peter Pan escapes from being a human at the tender age of seven days. Several sequels, adaptations, and spinoffs have emerged since then, all with slightly modified storylines. Barrie wrote three works involving Peter Pan:. M.

J. . The character is a little boy who refuses to grow up, and spends his time having magical adventures. Barrie, and the name of a stage play, a children's book, and various adaptations of them.

M. Peter Pan is a fictional character created by Scottish author J. Peter and Wendy (1911), later retitled Peter Pan, a novel for children based on the play. The stage play Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up (1904).

"Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens," which is a segment of his book The Little White Bird (1902).