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3%%Do not spoiler trope titles per Administrivia/HandlingSpoilers. If a trope name is too big a spoiler, list it in the description of another trope or don't list it at all.
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6%%
7[[foldercontrol]]
8
9[[folder: The Baker]]
10!!The Baker
11[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/c4335bd1b3a1bcd061440fc9e3dae43e.png]]
12-->'''Played by:''' Chip Zien (OBC), Ian Bartholomew (Original London Cast), Creator/StephenDeRosa (First Broadway Revival), Creator/BrianDarcyJames (Second Broadway Revival), Creator/JamesCorden (2014 film)
13
14->"''What if I just wasn't meant to have children?''"
15
16An average working man whose greatest wish is to have a child. Unfortunately, the Witch cursed him to be barren due to a perceived slight by his father. In a bid to reverse this, she gives three days for him and his wife to bring her Jack's cow, Red Riding Hood's cloak, Cinderella's slipper, and some of Rapunzel's hair.
17----
18* ActionSurvivor: He is in no way trained to conquer the obstacles he comes across, but does so nonetheless.
19* AfraidToHoldTheBaby: After his son is born, he feels awkward about holding or caring for him and leaves it all to his wife. During his HeroicBSOD after [[spoiler: his wife is killed]], he [[spoiler: feels so unsuited to single fatherhood that he almost abandons his son.]]
20* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: His wish for a son is granted, but when revisited in "So Happy" he and his wife complain that they have no room. [[spoiler: In the ensuing chaos, his wife is killed]].
21* ChangedMyMindKid: After he snaps out of his HeroicBSOD.
22* ClassicalAntiHero: Despite having an overall good heart, he is a somewhat weak willed man. This is generally played for comedy in Act 1. Less so in Act 2 when [[spoiler:he chooses to abandon his child along with Cinderella, Jack, and Red Riding Hood after his wife is killed by the giant. It takes a conversation with the ghost of his father to give him the resolve to go back to fix things.]]
23* DeadPersonConversation: Two in Act II: With [[spoiler: his father and wife]].
24* EveryoneCallsHimBarkeep: "The Baker."
25* FiveStagesOfGrief: [[spoiler:The Baker goes through these during Act II after his wife is killed.]]
26* HappilyMarried: He and his wife have their ups and downs, but they obviously love each other quite a lot. [[spoiler: Eventually subverted when she cheats on him.]]
27* TheHero: The focal character and one of the most good-hearted among the main cast.
28* HeroicBSOD: Despairing because of [[spoiler: his wife's death]], he leaves the other survivors to fight the giant. It takes a DeadPersonConversation with his father to snap him out of it.
29* HisNameReallyIsBarkeep: Implied. Jack and Little Red call him Mr. Baker.
30* {{Irony}}: He mourns his childlessness, but he keeps refusing to give away his bread to Red (who is a child) and calls her a thief for taking away and eating some of his creations.
31* LoserSonOfLoserDad: [[spoiler: The major source of his woes. It's eventually averted when his father tells him not to run away from his problems, inspiring the Baker to face the Giantess.]]
32* TheProtagonist: The largest role who evolves the most out of the cast and winds up saving the day.
33* StayInTheKitchen: This is the Baker's attitude in the beginning of the first act (both literally and figuratively), but he gets over it.
34* TookALevelInBadass: After helping kill the giant.
35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder: The Baker's Wife]]
38!!The Baker's Wife
39[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/4bc6d2f45d61b3b9c0f5cb62c042f9a9.png]]
40-->'''Played by:''' Joanna Gleason (OBC), Creator/ImeldaStaunton (Original London Cast), Creator/KerryOMalley (First Broadway Revival) Music/SaraBareilles (Second Broadway Revival), Creator/EmilyBlunt (2014 film)
41
42->"''You may know what you need, but to get what you want, better see that you keep what you have.''"
43
44The, well, [[EveryoneCallsHimBarkeep Baker's Wife]], a determined and practical woman who is a romantic at heart. Like him, she is motivated by the desire for a child, although she frequently asks after Cinderella's prince when she encounters the latter.
45----
46* ActionSurvivor: [[spoiler:Tragically subverted when she allows herself to be seduced by Cinderella's Prince despite being a married woman, which leads to her getting killed by the giant.]]
47* AllGirlsWantBadBoys: Turned on by take charge guys.
48* AntiHero: Type 3. She's a good person but she does a lot of morally questionable things to get what she wants, like trading beans she told Jack were magic (they turned out to be true, but she didn't know that at the time) for the cow.
49* BadBadActing: When she tries to get Jack to trade/buy the magic beans for the cow. "Oh... Oh! Oh no, we ''mustn't'' give up our beans!"
50* DeadpanSnarker: Moreso in the musical, but the film lets her sneak in a few lines.
51* DiesDifferentlyInAdaptation: [[spoiler:In the show, she is crushed by a falling tree the Giantess pushes over. In the film, she falls off a cliff.]]
52* DroppedABridgeOnHer: [[spoiler: She's trampled by a tree felled by the Giantess.]]
53* EveryoneCallsHerBarkeep: Though apparently her CanonName on the film's set was Margery.
54* ExpressDelivery: In the film, as soon as the curse is undone she immediately becomes nine months pregnant.
55* HappilyMarried: [[spoiler: Although she cheats on her husband in a moment of confused feelings]], they seem very happily married.
56* LeaningOnTheFourthWall: In "Moments in the Woods", the Baker's Wife sings "I'm in the wrong story". According to WordOfGod, Sondheim added this line after he realized that the story of the baker and his wife feels much more contemporary than the others. Joanna Gleason, who played the Baker's Wife, felt like her character was in the wrong story, and so did Sondheim. He felt like this needed acknowledgement.
57* LaserGuidedKarma: While it's hard to say that the punishment was suitable for the crime, [[spoiler:she is killed by the Giantess almost immediately after having an affair with Cinderella's Prince, an affair she doesn't seem to really regret in the song she sings right after.]]
58* LovingAShadow: Every time she talks to Cinderella, she sighs after the handsome Prince... but this is mostly envy for the glamorous life she associates with Princes; she later realizes her husband has many princely qualities of his own.
59%%* OnlySaneWoman
60* ParentingTheHusband: At least initially, she's sterner and more pragmatic than her husband.
61* PluckyGirl: The Baker's Wife displays a take-charge attitude when searching the woods for the four items she needs and also when hunting the giant.
62[[/folder]]
63
64[[folder: Jack]]
65!!Jack
66[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/c3b4b37a544c313267c3337ae3a78a8d.png]]
67-->'''Played by:''' Ben Wright (OBC), Richard Dempsey (Original London Cast), Adam Wylie (First Broadway Revival),Cole Thompson (Second Broadway Revival), Daniel Huttlestone (2014 film)
68
69->"''The difference between a cow and a bean is a bean can begin an adventure!''"
70
71The feckless protagonist of ''Literature/JackAndTheBeanstalk''. Here, his story starts out much the same -- he trades his beloved cow to the Baker for a handful of magic beans, and goes on to slay the giant he finds at the top of the beanstalk that grows from the beans.
72----
73* AgeLift: In the stage version, it's [[VagueAge not clear]] how old he's supposed to be, but he's implied to at least be in his late teens or a full-blown {{Manchild}}. In the film, he's a little boy.
74* BerserkButton: Depending on the production, don't you ever DARE call him a liar.
75* BreakTheCutie: Act II has him break down when he finds out [[spoiler:his mother died trying to defend him from the giant. As he says he'll kill the Steward, the Baker convinces him it's not worth it because the Steward is too far to find, and they have a giant to kill. Even though the Baker comforts him, he sounds more sober at the end when realizing he has no home, or family (apart from Milky-White if she survived)]].
76* CharacterDevelopment: At the end, he admits that he was at fault for bringing the giantess' wrath on the land after [[spoiler:the Witch commits suicide by throwing away the remaining beans]]. He also provides suggestions for the plan to defeat her, and is completely focused.
77* CloudCuckooLander: His head always seems to be in the clouds.
78* DisappearedDad: Mentioned as "not back" and never again.
79* TheDitz: Not the smartest one of the bunch.
80* DopeSlap: Is given several by his mother in the film.
81* DueToTheDead: The Witch caught him because [[spoiler:he had found the Baker's wife, dead, and buried her in a giantess's footprint]].
82* EveryoneHasStandards: He [[spoiler:was crying when he found the body belonging to the Baker's wife, and stopped in his quest to kill the giant to bury her. This led to the Witch catching him]].
83* IdiotHero: The most idiotic, at first.
84-->'''Jack's Mother''': "Sometimes, I fear you're touched!"
85* IntrovertedCatPerson: Or rather, Introverted Cow Person. He doesn't have any friends of his own because there aren't any other children in the village he lives in, and so gets all his companionship from Milky.
86* KarmaHoudiniWarranty: [[spoiler:He never gets any punishment for stealing from the giants and killing both of them, at first. Then, in Act II, their house collapses from a seeming earthquake, the Giantess wants his head, and his mother dies defending him. Jack is visibly terrified of the Witch as she grabs him and drags him to his death. Later, he breaks down on learning about his mother's death, going MyGodWhatHaveIDone when realizing he won't ever get revenge on the Steward. He even gets to live with the Baker's new family, but with some CharacterDevelopment to think before he acts before it hurts the one he loves.]]
87* LethallyStupid: To the point that his mother has reason to suspect that ''he'' was the one who destroyed the Baker's house.
88* OnlyFriend: He claims that Milky White is this. Played for laughs.
89%%* TenorBoy
90%%* TookALevelInBadass
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder: Cinderella]]
94!!Cinderella
95[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/c125598ece8b5c717e2a5f9db912f043.png]]
96-->'''Played by:''' Kim Crosby (OBC), Jaqueline Dankworth (Original London Cast), Creator/LauraBenanti (First Broadway Revival, Creator/PhillipaSoo (Second Broadway Revival), Creator/AnnaKendrick (2014 film)
97
98->"''Opportunity is not a lengthy visitor.''"
99
100Kind, gentle, earnest, and downtrodden by her stepmother and stepsisters, Cinderella's greatest wish is to attend the royal family's festival. There, one of the princes falls in love with her, but she fears that he will not love her should he realize she is a peasant.
101----
102* ActionGirl: She becomes this in Act II. She TookALevelInBadass, with Cinderella venturing [[AccidentalPun into the woods]] on her own and dumping her "Prince Charming" (who actually turned out to be a douche); in addition, she's [[spoiler: one of the only four survivors at the end of the musical and helps defeat the BigBad.]]
103* ActionSurvivor: She is not particularly adept at fighting off all the craziness that comes her way in the musical. Nonetheless, she proves to be extremely resourceful, determined, and surprisingly courageous. Along with three other characters, she successfully manages to overcome and defeat the BigBad in the end, after [[spoiler: everyone else dies]].
104* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: Her recurring theme of "I wish" kickstarts both acts. In Act I, she just wants to go to the festival; in Act II, she suggests hosting a festival as the Princess because it's time for one. At the least, her second wish never gets a chance to come to fruition.
105* BeingGoodSucks: Cinderella points out in her singing that the only reward she gets from her kindness is continuing abuse and slaps in the face.
106* BewareTheNiceOnes: She's one of the kindest women in the kingdom, but when the others pass the blame off on her for the giantess during "Your Fault", she is quick to throw it back at Jack. And she joins the rest of them in pushing the blame on the Witch, who in turn calls her and everyone else out for their hypocrisy.
107* BookEnds: She starts and ends the musical with "I wish."
108* ButtMonkey: She's the toilet paper of her family. Very near literally, since she's always covered in dust, dirt, and possibly food stains from her cooking and cleaning duties.
109* CinderellaPlot: [[TropeNamer Naturally,]] she's put upon by her stepmother and stepsisters.
110* CoolBigSis: She serves as a guiding feminine influence to Little Red.
111* CuteClumsyGirl: While wearing the gold slippers -- they're terrible to walk in. Lampshaded by the Baker's Wife:
112-->'''Baker's Wife:''' My, you do take an awful lot of spills, don't you?
113* TheDitherer: Highlighted in "On the Steps of the Palace", when she can't decide whether to let the Prince catch her or to run away back home. She decides ''not'' to decide, by leaving a shoe on the stair smeared with pitch.
114* ExtremeDoormat: Starts off as this, but later [[GrewASpine Grows A Spine]] when she [[spoiler: stands up to her Prince and dumps him for his philandering ways.]]
115* FriendToAllLivingThings: Her sidekick birds.
116* GrewASpine: See the ExtremeDoormat entry.
117* LovingAShadow: [[spoiler: She admits that she will always love "the prince at the ball".]]
118* MissingMom: However, she can still talk to her mom's spirit at her grave. [[spoiler: Until the Giantess crushes the grave, anyway.]]
119* NiceGirl: She's kind, friendly, and tries her best to remain hopeful and goodhearted in spite of her stepfamily's abuse. Part of her character development is learning that this doesn't mean she has to be a doormat.
120* NotSoDifferentRemark: When Little Red reveals her mother and grandmother are dead, Cinderella's expression changes as Red talks about how they would be disappointed in her. She knows what it's like to grow up without a mother, and sings to Red that it's hard when you don't have a parent to guide you.
121* PimpedOutDress: But of course. It's created by magic.
122* ThePratfall: Cinderella has a tough time running in those shoes...
123* PrincessClassic: {{Subverted|Trope}} in that she is better developed in the musical, with more of her own flaws.
124* RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething: PlayedWith in that Cinderella tries to help, but has to dress as a commoner to do so.
125* SpeaksFluentAnimal: Can communicate well with birds. The absurdity of this is lampshaded by Little Red.
126* SwissArmyTears: The tears Cinderella wept at her mother's grave helped grow the tree that allowed her to meet her mother's ghost (or reincarnation as an angel; either might be true).
127* TakeAThirdOption: Her choice is to flee from the prince a third time, or stay and be caught. Her decision is "not to decide" and run away - but she leaves her shoe behind as a way for him to find her.
128%%* TeamMom
129%%* TookALevelInBadass
130* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: Had she not thrown away the bean that the Baker's Wife traded her for her slipper, the Giantess would have had no way to climb down and wreak havoc. Of course, all the main characters are - ultimately - to blame in one way or another.
131[[/folder]]
132
133
134[[folder: Little Red Riding Hood]]
135!!Little Red Riding Hood
136[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/d8412d57ded27ce1f7569c927ea89bf1.png]]
137-->'''Played by:''' Danielle Ferland (OBC), Tessa Burbridge (Original London Cast), Moly Ephram (First Broadway Revival), Julie Lester (Second Broadway Revival), Lilla Crawford (2014 film)
138
139->"''The prettier the flower, the farther from the path.''"
140
141The protagonist of ''Literature/LittleRedRidingHood'', a strong-willed and fearless young girl hampered by her curiosity and naivete. Straying off the beaten path on her way to her grandmother's house leads to her discovering many things.
142----
143* ActionGirl: Shows signs of this in Act II, if some of her tropes below indicate anything. After replacing her red hood with a fur coat and receiving a knife for self-defense, she becomes a [[DeadpanSnarker Deadpan Snarking]], AxeCrazy GirlWithPsychoWeapon threatening to gut any potential attackers.
144* AxCrazy: Becomes this after she and her grandmother are cut out of the Wolf's stomach and start skinning the wolf. She threatens Jack's life just because he takes an interest in her fur cloak!
145* BigEater: Between the prologue and reaching Granny's, she eats nearly the entire basket of goods she was meant to bring a loaf of bread, a sticky bun (or four), and a few pies. She is even eating when she isn't singing her orders.
146* FlatWhat: To Cinderella: "You can talk to birds?"
147* GirlWithPsychoWeapon: She's supposed to be young and cute... until she pulls a knife on you.
148* GirlishPigtails: Lilla Crawford's portrayal of her has these throughout the whole film.
149* HeroicComedicSociopath: Seemingly has very little regard for everybody else at first. This is played for humor -- part of her storyline is learning morality.
150* IHaveAFamily: She brings up her grandmother as an excuse to take away the baked goodies from the married couple (the Baker keeps objecting, his wife enables her) but then Red keeps eating them herself, to which the Baker comments she might not save any for grandma.
151* LargeHam: Depending on the production, her screaming can be either heartbreaking or hilarious.
152* LittleMissBadass: She's a young girl.
153* LittleRedFightingHood: She does get eaten by the wolf, and needs to be rescued. After that, though? For starters, she made her new cloak herself -- from the wolf's pelt. After this, she is a SociopathicHero. The work goes in a different direction than the norm, though, as part of the CharacterDevelopment involves her learning morality.
154* PrettyInMink: She swaps her traditional red cape for a fur one made from the skin of the wolf.
155* TookALevelInBadass: After being eaten by the wolf, her granny gives her a knife that she uses with abandon at the slightest provocation.
156* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: Had she not goaded Jack to return to the Giant's castle and steal the harp, the Giantess would not have been so angry. Of course, all the main characters are to blame.
157[[/folder]]
158
159[[folder: The Witch]]
160!!The Witch
161[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/384550dd4b9abf110811c0e5a56f65d0.png]]
162-->'''Played by:''' Creator/BernadettePeters (OBC), Julia [=McKenzie=] (Original London Cast), Creator/VanessaWilliams (First Broadway Revival), Creator/PatinaMiller (Second Broadway Revival), Creator/MerylStreep (2014 film)
163
164->"''Sometimes the things you most wish for are not to be touched.''"
165
166Neighbor to the Baker and his wife and foster mother to Rapunzel. She's the one who cursed them to be barren, but cannot undo the curse until they complete her FetchQuest. While vain, self-serving, and sarcastic, as the show goes on the viewers see that she's insecure, lonely, and ultimately just as human as everybody else.
167----
168* AboveGoodAndEvil
169--> "I'm not good, I'm not nice, I'm just right."
170* AbusiveParents: Locks her adopted daughter in a tower all her life, and then gets snippy when the girl wants to leave. Based on some of her lyrics in "The Witch's Lament", she may gone too far to preserve Rapunzel's characteristics.
171** The Witch's own mother apparently wasn't very pleasant either, judging by the fact that the curse the Witch suffers if she loses any of her beans is something she specifically says her mother placed upon her and threatened her with.
172* AdaptationalBadass: The character she's based on, the Witch from ''Rapunzel'', didn't seem to have any magic at all -- certainly not the power to teleport anywhere or resurrect dead cows.
173* AdaptationalVillainy: She's more evil in the film adaptation. Since she doesn't witness Rapunzel die and thus go into a BSODSong, she's left without motivation to want Jack handed over to the Giantess. Instead, the first thing she says to the Giantess in the movie is basically, "We'll get the boy for you, don't worry'.
174* AgeLift: Typically, once the Witch breaks her curse, she turns into a much younger woman. In the film, she is still elderly even after the spell is broken due to being played by Meryl Streep, who was in her 60s at the time the film was being made.
175* AntiVillain: She cursed the Baker's family, she was overprotective of her daughter to an abusive degree, she tries to sacrifice Jack [[spoiler:to make the Giantess go away,]] ''and'' she starts throwing beans around during ''The Last Midnight'' to summon more giants -- but she's not the villain of the play and is, in fact, just as hurt, uncertain, and human as everyone else in the woods.
176* BroughtDownToNormal: She loses her powers at the end of Act I.
177* BrokenBird: Her misanthropy and belief that "the world is dark and wild" must come from somewhere, although we never learn exactly what happened. We do get a hint when she sings ''Lament'':
178-->''Couldn't you stay content / safe behind walls / as I / could not?''
179* CastingGag: A 2012 production features Donna Murphy, who previously voiced Rapunzel's stepmother in Disney's ''WesternAnimation/{{Tangled}}'', as the Witch.
180* DeathGlare: The filmed version (and several stage versions) have her deliver a glorious (and often hilarious) one to the Baker when he says, "Giants never strike the same place twice."
181* DarkActionGirl: Does several evil deeds, and is probably the biggest badass in the show.
182* DraggedOffToHell: One interpretation of the end of "Last Midnight." Especially clear in the 2012 version in which a body reaches up and grabs her, pulling her underground. In the 2022 Revival, when evoking her Mother's curse on herself, two giant, demonic, skeletal hands appear and grab her, before she disappears screaming.
183* DrivenToSuicide: Another. Of course, whether or not [[spoiler: she actually died]] is debatable.
184* DynamicEntry: She makes her entrance in the movie by smashing the bakery door.
185%%* EvilMatriarch
186* ForTheEvulz: Because watching [[spoiler:the Baker's father cry and the Baker's mother die when she claimed Rapunzel]] wasn't enough to mollify the Witch, she cursed the Baker to never have children.
187* FriendToAllChildren: '''Very''' downplayed, as she has no problem sacrificing young Jack to the Giantess, and finds Red Riding Hood to be an obnoxious brat; the 2002 revival version adds this element to "Last Midnight", as it becomes a haunting lullaby she sings to the Baker's Son as she contemplates stealing him away - like she did to Rapunzel - to prevent him from losing his innocence. She decides against it, as she has finally learned no one can stay completely pure forever. Likewise, in "Children Will Listen", she is the one to warn parents and adults that children are always watching and absorbing what is around them - so be sure to teach them well.
188* HaveAGayOldTime: One of the lyrics in her rap about the Baker's father stealing her vegetables: "He was robbing me, ''raping'' me". The original definition of the word was "destruction or spoiling of an area" - which is clearly the definition the Witch is using here.
189* HotWitch: She used to be agelessly beautiful, and is looking to break the curse to reclaim it. [[spoiler: She does, but loses her powers, effectively negating the 'witch' part of the trope]].
190* {{Hypocrite}}: She participates in the song "Your Fault", but then when the ultimate blame falls on her, she accuses them of only caring about the blame ("Last Midnight"). Of course, she justifies it under AtLeastIAdmitIt; she's not going to deny she has blame.
191* HypocriticalHumor: After the Giantess destroys the Baker's home...
192-->'''Baker:''' Did you do this to our home!?\
193'''Witch:''' Always thinking of yourselves. (''beat'') LOOK AT ''MY'' GARDEN!
194* IWasQuiteALooker: She appears as an ugly old hag, but when she drinks the potion she's reverted to her beautiful past self.
195* {{Jerkass}}: Right or wrong, she remains a thoroughly unpleasant individual.
196* JerkassHasAPoint: While she isn't the nicest person out there. she does have a point that if they ''don't'' [[spoiler: give Jack to the Giantess, said Giantess is likely to level half the kingdom]]. It's not a nice thing to do, but it's the only apparent option they have in that moment. Even the Baker briefly agrees in a moment of HeroicBSOD.
197* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: The Witch is more than just a classic villain, especially considering her moment of anguish after [[spoiler:Rapunzel dies]], and the fact that she, of all people, is the one who sings the beautiful "Children Will Listen" at the end. While "heart of gold" might be a stretch, she certainly has a heart.
198%%* KnightTemplarParent
199%%* LargeHam
200%%* MyBelovedSmother
201* OnlySaneWoman: The Witch has elements of this in Act Two, when she shows herself to be the only person who understands the gravity of the situation, and the unpleasant things that may need to be done to solve it.
202* ParentsAsPeople: It's safe to say that keeping a girl locked in a tower for her whole life is ''not'' what one would call "good parenting," but it's also clear that the Witch really does love her, and a lot of her dialogue and lyrics indicate that she genuinely believed she was doing the right thing.
203* PetTheDog: In Act I, she returns Milky White to Jack when the spell is complete, no strings attached. In some versions of Act II, such as the 2002 revival, she briefly considers [[spoiler:taking the Baker's son to raise as her own, but can't do it. She remembers all too well the pain that comes from raising a child, and TheChainOfHarm it can cause. The witch gives the baby a sincere kiss and returns him to his father unharmed before committing "suicide"]].
204* PunishedWithUgly: As punishment for losing the magic beans in her garden, she was turned into an old hag.
205* RhymesOnADime
206* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: In a truly epic fashion at the end of "Last Midnight," The witch throws away every last bean to bring a horrible curse on herself just to get away from everyone else.
207-->'''The Witch:''' Alright mother, ''when!?''\
208Lost the beans again!\
209Punish me the way you did then!\
210Give me claws and a hunch!\
211Just away from ''[[SurroundedByIdiots this bunch!]]''\
212And the gloom\
213And the doom\
214And the boom...\
215''CRUUUUUUUUUUUUUNCH!''
216* SilverVixen: In the 2014 film adaptation. Meryl Streep was 64 years old when the movie was filmed, so when the witch's beauty is restored, she still appears to be an old woman, but a beautiful one rather than the ugly one she had been for the first act.
217%%* TokenEvilTeammate
218* UncertainDoom: [[spoiler: The powerful curse she brings down on herself by tossing away all her beans whisks her away, just as she had wanted, but it's never made clear [[NothingIsScarier to where.]]]]
219* VainSorceress: {{Deconstructed}} with the Witch. [[spoiler:She trades her powers in to get back her (rightfully) good looks, only to massively regret it later]]; however, she's not so much AxCrazy over being ''ugly'' as she is weary of being [[AllOfTheOtherReindeer treated like a freak for how she looks]].
220* VillainousBreakdown: After [[spoiler:Rapunzel's death]], quickly leading to "Last Midnight" and her subsequent [[spoiler:abandonment of the rest of the cast.]]
221* VillainHasAPoint: She calls out all of the "good" characters for their actions in pursuit of their dreams. Likewise, the Baker implicitly agrees that she had every reason to be mad at his father (even if her curse was DisproportionateRetribution), and he delivers on their bargain.
222-->'''Witch''': Told a little lie, stole a little gold, broke a little vow, ''did you?''\
223Had to get your Prince, had to get your cow, have to get your wish, doesn't matter how; anyway, it doesn't matter now...\
224[...]\
225You're so nice. You're not good, you're not bad, you're just ''nice.''\
226I'm not good, I'm not nice, I'm just ''right.'' I'm the witch. You're the world.\
227I'm the hitch, I'm what no one believes; I'm the witch!\
228You're all liars and thieves, like his father,\
229like his son will be too - oh, why bother? You'll just do what you do!
230* VillainProtagonist: One of the leading roles... who just so happens to be a rather heinous woman.
231* WhatTheHellHero: "Last Midnight" is one big one to all the main characters.
232* WickedWitch: Played with. Although having the stereotypical look of a Wicked Witch, not to mention doing a couple of rather nasty things, she's still helping the protagonists (to an extent).
233[[/folder]]
234
235[[folder: Jack's Mother]]
236!!Jack's Mother
237[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ddb344cfca6f0fcdab8c5a5890254607.jpg]]
238-->'''Played by:''' Barbara Byrne (OBC), Creator/PatsyRowlands (Original London Cast), Marylouise Burke (First Broadway Revival), Aymee Garcia (Second Broadway Revival), Creator/TraceyUllman (2014 film)
239
240-> "''I wish my son was not a fool. I wish my house was not a mess. I wish the cow was full of milk, I wish the walls were full of gold, I wish a lot of things!''"
241
242Jack's browbeaten single mother determined to make their lives better.
243----
244* AbusiveParent: In the film adaptation, to some degree. She gets angrily very easily with Jack, and even hits him a few times; however, she still cares for her son, and just wants the two of them to have enough money and food to survive. She even keeps her MamaBear moment when she tells the Giantess that she will protect her son.
245* AdaptationalJerkass: She's a lot rougher towards her son in the film than in the play.
246* AngerBornOfWorry: She acts rather harsh to Jack, and makes it known that she thinks he's a fool, but she worries that his carelessness will get him into danger. After the giant falls into their backyard, she tracks down her son in the woods to make sure he's okay... and give him a DopeSlap.
247* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: She wishes to better her and Jack's lives. Jack slays the Giant and steals their treasures, making him and his mother wealthy -- but spurs the Giantess' anger.
248* CloudCuckooLandersMinder: She's the one always keeping her idiot son in line.
249* FaceDeathWithDignity: [[spoiler:After the Steward accidentally gives her a fatal blow to the head, she shows an almost zen calmness as she gives her last request, knowing full well that she's "on death's door" and using her last breath to plead with the Baker for Jack's safety]].
250* JerkassHasAPoint: [[spoiler: She's inconsiderate to the Giantess' feelings, but she correctly points out that the Giantess has killed a ''lot'' of people in her rampage against Jack, and people have good reason to be pissed with her.]]
251* LastRequest: [[spoiler: To the Baker, to protect Jack.]]
252* MamaBear: She was pretty brave (and stupid) for standing up to a giant, telling her that she will protect her son at all costs.
253* MyBelovedSmother: She's always trying to control Jack's actions. Justified, though, as Jack can and will cause catastrophic damage if left alone.
254* OnlySaneWoman: Her son is ''not'' that bright.
255* TapOnTheHead: Deconstructed. [[spoiler:Her death -- needless to say, a blow to the head hard enough to shut someone up is not going to end well...]]
256* ViolinScam: She orders Jack to carry Milky White for a very long distance out of their village, and find a sucker who's gullible enough to buy the cow for 5 pounds - or more - since their whole village knows how sick the cow has gotten. (This comes off as InsaneTrollLogic since whoever has that much money will inspect the cow first, and as she pointed out, the cow is clearly and visibly expiring being infested with parasites and open wounds.) [[spoiler: The scam was doomed to fail, since the cow died one day after the Baker bought it for beans]].
257[[/folder]]
258
259[[folder: The Princes]]
260!!Cinderella's Prince
261[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/6caa326e991bcee6d5522b8d841cbdc6.png]]
262-->'''Played by:''' Robert Westenberg (OBC), Clive Carter (Original London Cast), Creator/GreggEdelman (First Broadway Revival), Creator/GavinCreel (Second Broadway Revival), Creator/ChrisPine (2014 film)
263
264->"''I was raised to be charming, not sincere.''"
265
266Cinderella's prince, who falls in love with her after dancing with her at the ball.
267----
268* AfraidOfBlood
269-->''But even one prick - it's my thing about blood!''
270* AmazonChaser: A subtle example. He spends Act I intrigued about Cinderella because she's defiant and determined enough to keep running from him. In the second act, he doesn't give the Baker's Wife a second thought - until he hears she's interested in fighting the Giantess, and is even defying her husband's wishes to do so. Once he hears this, he immediately switches from ignoring her to dialing up the charm. [[spoiler: And then it's subverted; the story makes it clear that he's not interested in determined women as a character trait, he simply finds them mysterious and exciting. Once he gets to be with them, he loses interest immediately.]]
271* TheCasanova: Associated by his character quote.
272* DistractedByTheSexy: Off to bring down the Giant... and who's this lovely thing?
273* FakeUltimateHero: Says a lot but does nothing against the giant.
274* LargeHam: Oh, very VERY much so. Especially in "Agony" and the reprise.
275* PrinceCharmless: After he [[spoiler:engaged himself with the Baker's Wife,]] he immediately told her that it was just a moment in the woods, meaning it's something that was never to happen again. His womanizing ways result in [[spoiler:the Baker's Wife staying in the area where she dies and Cinderella leaving him because of his brief affair. And then, he learns nothing and goes on to pursue a relationship with Sleeping Beauty.]]
276* RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething: He never actually ''finds'' the Giant, but besides Cinderella herself, he's the only member of the royal family to actually get off his ass and go looking for her.
277* WantingIsBetterThanHaving: Moreso than anyone else in the story; after finally finding his runaway maiden in Cinderella, he grows bored with her and more intrigued with the mysterious Sleeping Beauty. If you pay attention, the IWantSong he shares with his brother are not about the actual ''women'' they're trying to woo, but entirely about the ''feeling'' of wanting something but not being able to get it.
278-->"The harder to get, the better to have."
279
280!!Rapunzel's Prince
281[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/db03dd540f632cac65f0618396e6f12f.png]]
282-->'''Played by:''' Chuck Wagner (OBC), Mark Tinkler (Original London Cast), Creator/ChristopherSieber (First Broadway Revival), Creator/JoshuaHenry (Second Broadway Revival), Creator/BillyMagnussen (2014 film)
283
284->"''Near may be better than far, but it still isn't there.''"
285
286Cinderella's prince's younger brother, who falls in love with Rapunzel.
287----
288* AdaptationalHeroism: He remains faithful to Rapunzel in the 2014 film. What's more, when Act II starts to go to hell, he says they should leave. Thus, they both survive.
289** In the 2022 revival, [[spoiler: his heart does stray from Rapunzel enough for him to sing the "Agony" reprise and pine for Snow White but he's seen at the end raising Rapunzel's twins indicating he did grow into his fatherly responsibilities.]]
290* TheCasanova: Depending on the production, he's a (slightly) more sympathetic version of this than his elder brother. The trope is averted entirely in the 2014 film. Particularly in the 2022 revival, [[spoiler: he focuses on being a father to his twins after Rapunzel's death.]]
291* EndearinglyDorky: In the film, Rapunzel is charmed by his bumbling attempt at a swing out of her tower. It helps that he's no longer a womanizer in that version.
292* EyeScream: He's blinded by falling into thorns after the Witch pushes him from the tower. He gets better.
293* LargeHam: Engaging in HamToHamCombat with his brother.
294* PrinceCharmless: In the play. He's nicer in the 2014 film.
295* WantingIsBetterThanHaving: Along with his brother, this is his main character flaw. After rescuing Rapunzel from her tower, he quickly grows bored and strays toward Snow White. [[spoiler: In the 2014 film he manages to stay with his (still living) wife, letting him grow out of this.]]
296* WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes: He's evidently terrified of [[InsistentTerminology dwarfs]]. Unfortunately for him, [[spoiler: they're the only thing standing between him and his next fling, Snow White]].
297[[/folder]]
298
299[[folder: Rapunzel]]
300!!Rapunzel
301[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/f0950d55c66de7ef4374e3ed3c3c3a83.png]]
302-->'''Played by:''' Pamela Winslow (OBC), Mary Lincoln (Original London Cast), Melissa Dye (First Broadway Revival), Alysia Velez (Second Broadway Revival), Creator/MacKenzieMauzy (2014 film)
303
304->"''I am no longer a child. I wish to see the world!''"
305
306Protagonist of ''Literature/{{Rapunzel}}''. The Witch's ward, a beautiful but unstable maiden whom the Witch has had locked in a tower for her entire life.
307----
308* AbledInTheAdaptation: She doesn't suffer a nervous breakdown in the film, owing to finding her prince sooner. He's also more patient with her trauma, and suggests they leave when Act II starts to go to hell.
309
310* BeautifulSingingVoice: Her lovely yet haunting voice carries through the woods and is the only thing that can calm the Witch in the midst of her tantrums; it also charms the Prince, before he basks in her beauty.
311* BreakTheCutie: While not the Witch's intent, her treatment of Rapunzel eventually caused the girl to be subject to hysterics.
312%%* TheDitz
313* DrivenToSuicide: One interpretation of her [[spoiler: running into the path of the Giant's foot]].
314* DroppedABridgeOnHer: Or perhaps more accurately, [[spoiler: a foot.]]
315* DumbBlonde: Rapunzel shows elements of this in Act I.
316* GirlInTheTower: Of course. Deconstructed as well - all that isolation contributed greatly to her instability.
317* HairOfGoldHeartOfGold: Played straight in Act I; her mental instability subverts it by Act II.
318* HystericalWoman: [[spoiler: By the time of her death]] she's certainly this.
319* LongLostRelative: She's the Baker's younger sister, who was taken at birth from their parents because their father stole greens from the Witch's garden for their mother. Only the Witch acknowledges this in-story, however.
320* MoodSwinger: It's mentioned by her prince in Act II that she swings moods pretty quickly.
321* TheOphelia: She's lovely but unstable, thanks to her time in the tower and the Witch's treatment of her.
322* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Finally tells off the Witch for sticking her in a tower all her life, abandoning her, blinding her Prince, and generally being a {{jerkass}}.
323--> '''Witch:''' ''(defensive, yet sincere)'' I was just trying to be a good mother.
324* RichInDollarsPoorInSense: Even after becoming a princess, she still doesn't have the best grip on life. (She ''was'' kept in a tower her whole life, after all.)
325* ScreamingWoman: She lets out a loud scream at the end of the "Agony" reprise.
326* SparedByTheAdaptation: In the 2014 film, where she's not DrivenToSuicide, and instead gets to live happily ever after with her prince.
327* SwissArmyTears: Her tears heal her prince's blindness, as in the original.
328* TheUnintelligible: Rapunzel only has a few scenes where she actually talks. The rest of the show, she expresses her feelings by "humming a lighthearted air" and screaming. Somewhat {{lampshaded}} by her prince. After the reprise of "Agony," Rapunzel, out of nowhere, lets out an enormous scream. The prince doesn't look the slightest bit shocked and says "Rapunzel," in deadpan.
329[[/folder]]
330
331[[folder: The Narrator]]
332!!The Narrator
333[[quoteright:218:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/500df156af869b691388c7c7c88ecdb8.png]]
334-->'''Played by:''' Tom Alredge (OBC), Nicholas Parsons (Original London Cast). Creator/JohnMcMartin (First Broadway Revival), Creator/DavidPatrickKelly (Second Broadway Revival), Role omitted from the film version.
335
336->"''Once upon a time . . . later.''"
337
338The cheery, intelligent narrator of the story.
339----
340* AdaptedOut: In the 2014 film, the Baker takes over the Narrator role.
341* AnyoneCanDie: [[spoiler: Even the ''narrator''.]]
342** "You're going to be on the INSIDE, now!"
343* CouldHaveAvoidedThisPlot: [[spoiler: When the characters try to offer the Narrator to the Giantess as a sacrifice, the Narrator reminds them that the story would be lost if he was obliterated. Regardless of this, however, the Witch gives the Narrator to the Giantess anyway, and as soon as the Giantess sees that the Narrator isn't Jack, the Narrator is dropped from the Giantess' hand and killed. Possibly concerned with the subsequent events of the story without the Narrator, the Baker's Wife points out: "We might have thought of something else."]] (see below for subverted note though)
344* DeathOfAChild: In the productions where The Narrator is a child [[spoiler:he's still killed by the Giantess in the story.]]
345** Subverted, actually, he comes back in the end and reunites with his father.
346%%* FirstPersonSmartass
347%%* InteractiveNarrator
348* LemonyNarrator: [[spoiler:Ends up biting him in the ass. See below.]]
349%%* OnlySaneMan
350* RageAgainstTheAuthor: [[spoiler: The rest of the characters essentially feed him to the giant, although it's the Witch that does it right after the other characters realize how lost they would be without him. See above for details.]]
351* TheRunaway: Several new productions turn the narrator into a young boy instead of a grown man, with the addition of a new BookEnds story where he runs away to live in the woods after a fight with his father. [[spoiler: Said father is revealed to be played by the same actor as The Baker and is the one who told the boy the story in the first place.]]
352[[/folder]]
353
354[[folder: The Wolf]]
355!!The Wolf
356[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/b0a453f6e7c35bc3935bf5640fb60d0e.png]]
357-->'''Played by:''' Robert Westernberg (OBC), Clive Carter (Original London Cast), Creator/JohnnyDepp (2014 film)
358
359->"''Hello, little girl...''"
360
361[[TheBigBadWolf The Big Bad]] [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Wolf]], a hungry and insatiable hunter on the lookout for his next meal.
362----
363* AdaptationalAttractiveness: His physical appearance varies depending on the production. He's usually portrayed with a realistic wolf head on a human body, but some versions downplay his animalistic qualities and make him look more human. The Central Park production portrays him as a bare-chested rockstar type wearing a wolf pelt, and in the film adaptation, he's Johnny Depp.
364* AdvertisedExtra: Plastered alongside all of the other main characters in promotional material, only to [[spoiler:be killed off within the first 29 minutes]].
365* TheBigBadWolf: Unsurprisingly.
366* CoatFullOfContraband: In the movie version, the Wolf opens his coat to show a display of candy when he is trying to lure Little Red Riding Hood off the path.
367* CoversAlwaysLie: The covers imply that Johnny Depp plays one of the princes or at least a major character in the film, complete with the corresponding black leather jacket with studs, but he only plays the Big Bad Wolf, who has five minutes of spotlight [[spoiler:before getting killed by the Baker]].
368* DiscOneFinalBoss: The Baker and Little Red have no problem taking care of him. And then Act II happens.
369* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: Emphasizing the allegory of the original fairy tale, his VillainSong "Hello Little Girl" has various connotations of the Wolf being a ''sexual'' predator, Red Riding Hood being his chosen victim. The film runs with this angle by portraying him as a [[LittleBitBeastly wolf-like]], vaguely human man, having him try to tempt her with a [[CoatFullOfContraband coat full of candy]] like a [[PaedoHunt pedophile]]. The fact that some versions of the character have a visible penis, and he refers to Red Riding Hood as "little girl", certainly doesn't help.
370* FanDisservice: He has a visible penis in some versions.
371* MinorCharacterMajorSong: He sings [[LetsDuet most of]] "Hello, Little Girl", a song about how he [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything hungers]] for Little Red Riding Hood.
372%%* MenacingStroll
373* VillainLoveSong: His song, naturally.
374[[/folder]]
375
376[[folder: The Giantess]]
377!!The Giantess
378-->'''Played by:''' Merle Louise (OBC, voice), Creator/EuniceGayson (Original London Cast, voice), Frances de la Tour (2014 film)
379
380->"''That boy stole our gold, our hen, and our harp. Then he killed my husband! I must avenge the wrongdoing.''"
381
382* AttackOfThe50FootWhatever: Attack of the 50-foot giant woman, to be precise. As she squashes her way in destroying the Woods, [[spoiler: ruining the previous lives of the main characters in her wake.]] [[NeverMessWithGranny Although, she is not exactly the 50-foot woman you are expecting.]]
383* AntiVillain: Most of the deaths she causes are accidents, and if she were human, Jack would have been thrown into a dungeon for the things he did to her and her husband. That said, she still causes exponentially more death and destruction than Jack ever did and is pretty callous about it.
384* BlindWithoutEm: She loses her glasses and can't look for Jack by sight.
385* CrusadingWidow: Is (reasonably) furious with Jack for mugging then murdering her husband. Her motive for her rampage is to find him and make him pay.
386* GeniusBruiser: "NOT ALL GIANTS ARE DUMB!"
387* KnightOfCerebus: Her arrival in Act 2 changes the story from being a comedic farce to something a lot more serious.
388* MrsRobinson: Implied in "Giants in the Sky", where Jack describes how she gave him food and rest and "drew him close to her giant breast" during his stay.
389* NoIndoorVoice: A given for a giant. The volume for her dialogue is always amplified to suggest her enormous appearance, and she yells even ''louder'' the angrier she gets.
390* TheUnseen: She's usually portrayed as an unseen character voiced by an offstage actress, with the characters onstage "looking up at her" to signify her presence. Some productions work their way around this; in the Broadway revival and Hollywood Bowl staging, we see her enormous shadow towering over the cast, while in the outdoor productions, she's portrayed as a giant, puppeteered face. The film subverts this by showing her face during the climax, though her face is obscured in her first appearance as a MythologyGag.
391* WellIntentionedExtremist: She explained her reasons when she's introduced. She had every right to be upset with Jack for killing her husband and stealing their belongings.
392[[/folder]]
393
394[[folder: Cinderella's Father]]
395!!Cinderella's Father
396-->'''Played by:''' Creator/EdmundLyndeck (OBC), John Rogan (Original London Cast). Role omitted from the film.
397
398->"''The closer to the family, the closer to the wine.''"
399
400* AdaptedOut: His role is omitted from the 2014 film.
401%%* AlcoholicParent
402* TheLostLenore: In early previews, one of the reasons for his drunkenness and negligence towards Cinderella's abuse is due to how much she reminds him of his beloved first wife, and his sorrow at losing said wife.
403* ParentalAbandonment / ParentalObliviousness: This part can be played either way; either way, whatever the reason, he's not a very good father nowadays. In the 2022 Broadway revival, he makes contemptuous shooing motions at her when she politely wishes him goodnight, indicating that he's sick of family matters to care for her.
404* PosthumousCharacter: In the film, he's dead as well as Cinderella's mother.
405%%* UnnamedParent
406[[/folder]]
407
408[[folder: The Steward]]
409!!The Steward
410-->'''Played by:''' Philip Hoffman (OBC), Peter Ledbury (Original London Cast), Richard Glover (2014 film)
411
412->"''The greater the good, the harder the blow.''"
413
414* AccidentalMurder: He's not actually trying to kill Jack's Mother, he just wants to shut her up, and accidentally hits her head too hard.
415* AdaptationalHeroism: In the 2014 film. ''Hero'' is a huge stretch, but he seemed genuinely regretful for what he did to Jack's Mother. He also doesn't try to strike her head; he just pushes her down, and she happens to fall on it.
416* DirtyCoward: If refusing to give up his life for others and justifying his killing of Jack's Mother is of any indication.
417* {{Hypocrite}}: He defends his killing of Jack's Mother as being necessary for the greater good, but when the Witch suggests that it's in his line of duty to sacrifice ''his'' life, he immediately declares that he's not dying for anyone.
418* {{Jerkass}}: Not only does he come across as rather rude and pompous, but he refuses to do his job when his life's on the line, and refuses to take blame for his murder or Jack's Mother.
419* KarmaHoudiniWarranty: He ''literally'' gets away with murder. In the musical, it's implied that he and the royal family starve to death after getting lost in the forest, considering only his ghost appears at the end.
420* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: While he refuses to take responsibility, he can still be played as actually feeling guilty about killing Jack's Mother, with the original Broadway recording showing he struggles to get all the words out in his self defense.
421* ObstructiveBureaucrat: He doesn't ''make'' policy, he just ''follows'' it.
422[[/folder]]
423
424[[folder: The Mysterious Man]]
425!!The Mysterious Man
426-->'''Played by:''' Tom Alredge (OBC), John Rogan (Original London Cast), Simon Russell Beale (2014 film)
427
428->"''No knot unties itself.''"
429
430* AdaptedOut: He's given very little screen time in the film adaptation. He only shows up when [[spoiler:the Baker is trying to run away and he briefly encourages him to turn around and help stop the Giantess. It's also implied that he's already dead, and didn't die trying to help his son and daughter-in-law get their wish granted.]]
431* AmbiguouslyHuman: The mysterious man repeatedly pops up out of nowhere throughout the play, giving strange advice to the protagonists before disappearing without a trace. [[spoiler: He is later revealed to be the Baker's father and dies soon after the curse is lifted, but his presence in Act II implies he may be something else entirely. Indeed, several of the characters refer to him as some type of spirit, and it's possible he may have been DeadAllAlong, assuming he really is the Baker's father.]]
432* TheAtoner: He spends most of the play helping out the Baker. It's because [[spoiler:the Baker is his son and the Old Man regrets abandoning him]].
433* CatchphraseInterruptus: His enigmatic introduction, the final time he offers it; overlaps with RuleOfThree.
434* TheChessmaster: He subtly tries to manipulate the other characters to help the Baker and his Wife break the spell, He's the one who encourages Jack to trade Milky White ("the cow as white as milk") to the pair in exchange for magic beans, and later provides them with the final ingredient by [[spoiler: telling them that "the hair as yellow as corn" can come from an ''actual'' ear of corn.]]
435* DeadPersonConversation: [[spoiler:When the Baker attempts to run away in Act II, the Man appears and talks him out of it.]]
436* DelightingInRiddles: He speaks almost exclusively in riddles and cryptic poems. Even his CatchPhrase is a riddle: "When first I appear, I seem mysterious, but when explained, I'm nothing serious." As a bonus, the answer to that riddle ''is'' "a riddle."
437* LikeFatherLikeSon: Towards the end of "No More", [[spoiler:he and the Baker both say this. This naturally convinces the Baker to not run away and instead help stop the Giantess.]]
438* LukeIAmYourFather: [[spoiler: He's the Baker and Rapunzel's father, although only the Baker ever finds this out.]] He doesn't actually say it, though, preferring to remain unknown; it's the Witch who [[IncrediblyLamePun spills the beans.]]
439%%* NoNameGiven
440* OlderAndWiser: [[spoiler:During "No More", he points out how stupid it is to run away from your problems and that it makes it harder to live with yourself. Obviously, this was his biggest regret, leaving his son and afraid to face his mistakes head-on.]]
441* RedemptionEqualsDeath: [[spoiler: Implied given that he dies immediately after reuniting with his son the Baker after abandoning him and helping him break the childlessness curse.]]
442* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: [[spoiler: He's almost identical to the Beggar Woman in ''Theatre/SweeneyToddTheDemonBarberOfFleetStreet'', another Sondheim musical--they both seem detached from reality, run around offering strange advice and cryptic words to the main characters, and turn out to be beloved relatives thought long dead (the Mysterious Man is the Baker's and Rapunzel's father, and the Beggar Woman is Sweeney's wife and Johanna's mother).]]
443* WalkingSpoiler: It's hard to discuss his importance to the plot [[spoiler: without revealing that he's the Baker's and Rapunzel's DisappearedDad.]]
444[[/folder]]

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