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1[[quoteright:281:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/anon1909.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:281:Rapunzel (with, as she is often depicted, golden hair)]]
3
4->''Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let down your hair!''
5
6Once upon a time, a couple lived next door to a witch with a beautiful garden. The wife developed such a craving for the rapunzel (specified as rampion in some versions) in this garden that the husband snuck into the garden and stole some for her. The longing increased, and the husband tried to steal more, only to be caught by the witch, who demanded their unborn child as a consequence.
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8Sure as her word, the witch took the couple's daughter and called her Rapunzel. When she was twelve, the witch shut Rapunzel into a tall tower without doors. Whenever she wanted to enter, the witch would call, "Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let down your hair", and Rapunzel would lower her extremely long hair for the witch to climb.
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10One day, a prince [[LoveAtFirstNote overheard Rapunzel singing]], and, having taken an interest in her situation, soon saw how the witch came and went. He repeated the witch's trick, Rapunzel dutifully let her hair down, and the two made plans to elope. One day, however, Rapunzel [[IdiotBall accidentally]] revealed the Prince's existence to the witch, who [[TraumaticHaircut cut off the girl's hair]] and banished her to the desert. The witch then lay in wait for the Prince, and pushed him off the tower into a bed of thorns, which blinded him.
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12The [[StarCrossedLovers unlucky couple]] wandered the wasteland for some time (during which Rapunzel [[TeenPregnancy bore either a single child or twins]], according to some versions) before running into one another. Rapunzel immediately embraced him, weeping, and her [[SwissArmyTears tears fell on his eyes and healed them]]. He took her back to his kingdom, and they lived HappilyEverAfter.
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14The best known version of this story comes from Creator/TheBrothersGrimm, probably based on Giambattista Basile's "Petrosinella/Parsley". Initially, Rapunzel betrayed the Prince's existence by remarking on how tight her dress was getting around the middle, but the Grimms decided that [[{{Bowdlerise}} this was too raunchy]] and so in later versions, she instead remarked that the witch was much heavier to pull up than her Prince.
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16The story may be based on the legend of Rudaba as found in the ''Literature/TheShahnameh'', as well as the tale of St. Barbara. Many of the older forms -- such as "Literature/SnowWhiteFireRed" -- appear more closely related to a tale type called "The Girl Helps The Hero Flee" -- such as "Literature/TheWhiteDove". Another variant is "Literature/{{Prunella}}". Some researchers also consider this to be a remnant of some pre-Christian European [[ThePowerOfTheSun sun goddess]] myth - compare for instance the stories of Saule's imprisonment in Baltic Mythology.
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18The Grimms' version can be found [[https://www.grimmstories.com/en/grimm_fairy-tales/rapunzel here]], [[https://sites.pitt.edu/~dash/grimm012.html here]], [[https://www.gutenberg.org/files/52521/52521-h/52521-h.htm#hdr_3 here]] and [[https://web.archive.org/web/20190702161745/http://www.surlalunefairytales.com/authors/grimms/12rapunzel.html here]]. Creator/AndrewLang's version of the tale can be read [[http://mythfolklore.net/andrewlang/094.htm here]] and [[https://web.archive.org/web/20200303053419/http://surlalunefairytales.com/rapunzel/index.html here]]. Giambattista Basile's "Petrosinella/Parsley" can be read [[https://web.archive.org/web/20200507073524/http://www.surlalunefairytales.com/pentamerone/10parsley1911.html here]].
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20In 1988, ''Anime/GrimmsFairyTaleClassics'' dedicated a whole episode to this tale.
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22A Franchise/DisneyAnimatedCanon version of this fairy tale was released in 2010 under the title ''WesternAnimation/{{Tangled}}'', as a result of ExecutiveMeddling figuring a non-gender specific title would bring more people in.
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24----
25!! "Rapunzel" contains examples of the following tropes:
26
27* AbusiveParents: The Witch is a ParentalSubstitute version in some retellings:
28** In ''WesternAnimation/{{Tangled}}'' she verbally abuses Rapunzel and constantly plays with her feelings, scares her into believing the world is horrible so she'll stay with her forever for her own purposes, preys on her self-esteem to make her vulnerable and completely reliant on her, etc.
29** In the [[Anime/GrimmsFairyTaleClassics anime version]] she keeps Rapunzel locked away pretty much from infancy rather than from her twelfth birthday, and when she finds out about the Prince... she forcibly cuts the girl's hair and beats her (which could've potentially made her miscarry the child she was already pregnant with) before throwing her out and then confronting the prince.
30* AccidentalGoodOutcome: In some versions of the story, the prince's [[EyeScream eyes get ripped out]], and then Rapunzel cries on him, [[SwissArmyTears inadvertently making the eyes grow back]].
31* AdaptationExpansion:
32** Very prone to it. ''Theatre/IntoTheWoods'' expands on the relationship between Rapunzel and the Witch (as well as Rapunzel's mental state when it's all over...) There is also a graphic novel, ''ComicBook/RapunzelsRevenge'', set in the Old West where the title character escapes on her own, uses her hair as lassos, and sets out to overturn the wicked witch's empire.
33** Donna Jo Napoli's ''Zel'' delves into the psyche of the Witch, the Prince, and Rapunzel, including the effects of being locked in a tower and devoid of almost all human contact for months at a time.
34** Regina Doman's ''[[Literature/FairytaleNovels Rapunzel Let Down]]'' retells the story in a modern setting.
35** ''Series/OnceUponATime'' puts an interesting spin on the story: [[spoiler:The "witch" is actually just a physical embodiment of Rapunzel's fear, created when she ate something called Nightroot, which is a cure for anxiety.]] Also, the prince who rescues her is Prince Charming from the story of Snow White. As he is already married, they do not become a couple.
36** ''Faerie Tale Theatre'' pads out the first half of the story, focusing on the parents. It's also implied that the witch hypnotized the mother into wanting the vegetables.
37** Rapunzel joins the cast of the ''VideoGame/DarkParables'' in the seventh installment, where she is trapped in the long-forgotten FictionalCountry of Floralia. Here, she is one of two princesses, each of whom has magic powers - Rapunzel is a FriendToAllLivingThings, with a magical singing voice and SwissArmyTears that can heal. Her little half-sister Belladonna, on the other hand, is an EnemyToAllLivingThings, whose lethal powers mean that only Rapunzel can touch her without danger. Mother Gothel is the younger princess's nursemaid, who takes advantage of her attachment to Rapunzel to enact an elaborate revenge plot on Floralia's patron goddess, endangering all of humanity in the process.
38* AdaptationalVillainy: If the witch wasn't villainous enough for forcing a desperate man to give up his child after stealing her vegetables, some versions imply or outright state that the witch put a spell on Rapunzel's mother to make her crave her rampion. Modern adaptations tend to make the witch much more outright evil by playing up her emotional abuse towards Rapunzel.
39* AmbiguouslyEvil: It's not clear whether Mother Gothel can be truly called malevolent. There's no mention of her abusing, exploiting or even neglecting Rapunzel. She did lock her adoptive daughter into a tower, but it's implied this was done out of an overblown protective instinct, rather than possessiveness. It's also noteworthy that, in some versions, she doesn't actually do anything to the Prince. So, is she evil or not? Numerous retellings and adaptations try to answer this question, one way or another, with modern ones either giving her a sympathetic portrayal, or being ''far'' less charitable to her.
40* BabyAsPayment: Rapunzel ends up in the tower because her father promised a witch his firstborn in exchange for herbs from her garden.
41* BabiesEverAfter: Almost all versions end with Rapunzel and the prince living happily ever after with their two children (even if Rapunzel's pregnancy was not mentioned earlier). In the [[Anime/GrimmsFairyTaleClassics anime]] they only have one son, who's actually the one who finds the Prince (not knowing he's his father) and takes him to Rapunzel's presence, leading to their reunion.
42* BeautifulSingingVoice: In the original fairytale, ''Literature/{{Rapunzel}}'' is noted as having a beautiful singing voice that attracts the prince who would quickly become her rescuer.
43* {{Bowdlerise}}: In the revised edition of Creator/TheBrothersGrimm's story, Rapunzel (handling the IdiotBall) asks the witch why she's so much heavier to bring up the tower than the prince. This was changed from the original version, determined to be [[WhatDoYouMeanItsForKids unfriendly for children]], in which Rapunzel innocently asked [[TeenPregnancy why her dress was getting so tight around the middle]].
44** Most modern tellings leave out the fate of the witch in one version of the story...the prince zaps her with a wand that makes her [[CruelAndUnusualDeath dance into a thornbush and lacerate herself to death.]]
45* DamselInDistress: The titular heroine, who is locked in a tower and in need of rescue. Interestingly, however, the prince does not actually save her -- she only gets out of the tower when the witch banishes her. In the end, ''Rapunzel'' saves the ''prince'' by healing his eyes with her tears.
46* DeathGlare: The witch is described as giving the prince a "wicked and venomous" look during their confrontation.
47* DefiledForever: The original version, where Rapunzel gets pregnant and that's what tips off the witch. So Rapunzel is banished to a faraway desert.
48* DumbBlonde: Rapunzel can come off as this in the revised Grimm version, where she carries an IdiotBall in her moment of forgetfulness to ask the witch why she is heavier to bring up the side of the tower with her hair than the prince. Not so much in the original version, where she innocently wonders aloud why [[TeenPregnancy her clothes keep getting tighter]], which makes her seem merely ignorant (understandable, considering she almost certainly never learned the birds and the bees) rather than outright scatterbrained.
49* EnterStageWindow: The only entrance and exit into Rapunzel's tower is a window, through which she uses her hair to bring people up and down.
50* EvilTowerOfOminousness: Rapunzel's tower serves as her prison, doubling as this.
51* EvilMatriarch: Rapunzel calls the witch "Frau Gothel," which means "godmother," While it could be just a formality, she is a literal godmother in some early French and Italian variants of the story.
52* EyeScream: The Prince is blinded near the end of the story, either by falling into thorn bushes or by the witch scratching his eyes out. Though in some versions, the witch puts a curse of blindness on him.
53* TheFairFolk: In early versions, the witch was a fairy. She sure acts like it!
54* GildedCage: Rapunzel's tower is often depicted as a very nice place to live.
55* GirlInTheTower: Possibly ''the'' girl in the tower.
56* GratuitousPrincess: Rapunzel is not a princess in the original tale, being the daughter of two peasants. More than one adaptation, including ''WesternAnimation/{{Tangled}}'', alters some story details so she's of royal blood.
57* HairOfGoldHeartOfGold: The innocent, beautiful, pure, inaccessible maiden is blonde. Yup.
58** ''Tangled'' subverts it since [[spoiler: Rapunzel is ''not'' a natural blonde, but a brunette like both of her parents. The ''magic'' in her hair is what makes her a blonde.]]
59* HandicappedBadass: After he's blinded, the Prince ''[[IWillFindYou still searches for Rapunzel on foot]].''
60* HappilyEverAfter: After suffering at the hands of the witch, Rapunzel and the prince return to his kingdom in happiness (with their twin children in the original version).
61* HarpOfFemininity: Rapunzel has one in her tower in some versions.
62* TheHedgeOfThorns: In many versions, there's one at the base of the tower and the Prince is blinded as he falls on it.
63* IAmNotPretty: Some variations give Rapunzel self-esteem issues, making her believe she's ugly.
64* IdiotBall: Creator/TheBrothersGrimm gave Rapunzel this in their {{Bowdlerise}}d version when they have her, unprompted, mention the Prince to the witch. The first edition at least makes sense -- Rapunzel wonders aloud why her clothing no longer fits. Unsurprisingly, considering how the girl lived her life, she didn't know she was pregnant. The ''Series/FaerieTaleTheatre'' adaptation removes the IdiotBall by giving Rapunzel a pet parrot who mimics the prince one day when the Witch comes to visit.
65* IfICantHaveYou: Mother Gothel, of course.
66* ImprobableHairstyle: Needless to say, human hair probably can't grow that long, certainly not while remaining healthy, shiny and beautiful. Since she's living with a witch, AWizardDidIt could come into play -- suggesting that the witch enchanted the hair. In ''WesternAnimation/{{Tangled}}'' it's justified because the hair is a result of magic. Subverted in ''WesternAnimation/BarbieAsRapunzel'' where the hair is only floor-length - which is possible in real life, depending on the person's genes - and the maintenance is believable because she's only locked in the tower for one day.
67* InformedAbility: The witch never actually does any magic in either of the original Grimm tellings. Retellings and adaptations, however, often let her show off her talents.
68* IWillFindYou: The Prince does ''not'' stop looking for Rapunzel despite having being blinded. If some version are believed (i.e., ''Anime/GrimmsFairyTaleClassics''), the guy looks for his beloved ''for several years''.
69* JustifiedCriminal: Modern people often don't understand why Rapunzel's father would steal from a witch and then give up their child as payment, but in preindustrial cultures, pregnancy cravings were taken quite seriously. It's likely that Rapunzel's father ''literally'' thought his wife and unborn child might die without rampion.
70* KarmaHoudini: In most versions, it isn't mentioned what happens to the witch after she banishes Rapunzel.
71** It is often common in retellings to have her be stuck in the tower. The earliest known variant, [[http://www.surlalunefairytales.com/rapunzel/stories/petros.html Petrosinella]], avoids this by having her get eaten by a wolf.
72* TheKindnapper: Some interpretations of the witch.
73* KnightTemplarParent: [[AlternativeCharacterInterpretation Some versions]] of the witch.
74* LaserGuidedKarma: In some versions and adaptations, the witch ends up trapped in the very same tower she imprisoned Rapunzel in. For bonus points, this sometimes happens as a result of her causing the Prince's fall.
75* LawOfInverseFertility: Her parents had long wanted and never had a child. Apparently the witch also wanted a child. And in some versions, Rapunzel -- who evidently didn't inherit her parents' fertility problems -- inconveniently becomes pregnant.
76* LeonineContract: The witch is furious to find Rapunzel's father stealing rampion from her garden, and when he explains that his wife is pregnant and craving it, she lets him have as much as he wants--[[OnOneCondition if he gives up their future child.]] Grimm's version explicitly states that ''"in his distress of mind the man promised everything."'' In other versions, the witch threatens to kill HIM if he doesn't give up their child, which would have left his wife pregnant and ''widowed,'' which is [[CaptainObvious not a good situation.]]
77* LettingHerHairDown: Something Gothel and the prince keep asking Rapunzel to do; Freud had a field day with the metaphorical implications of this request.
78* LooseLips: In some versions, Rapunzel gives away the Prince's visits when she asks the witch why she's so much heavier/slower than him.
79* LoveAtFirstNote: The prince for Rapunzel, as he first hears her songs and then sees her.
80* LoveAtFirstSight: Rapunzel for the prince, in return.
81* LuredIntoATrap: After the witch cuts off Rapunzel's hair and banishes her, she lets down the shorn locks when the Prince, unaware of what happened, calls to Rapunzel. Though what happens next depends on the version, her intentions for him are clearly not good.
82* MissConception: In the first edition of the Grimm tales, the sorceress gets wind of the prince's visits when Rapunzel wonders why her dress is getting tighter around the middle. Obviously, it does not occur to Rapunzel (because of her extremely sheltered life) that she could be pregnant. This version of events was sanitized from the second edition onward, where Rapunzel simply blabs out that the prince visits her in a moment of thoughtlessness.
83* MyBelovedSmother: Some takes on the witch make her into an overprotective parental figure.
84* MySecretPregnancy: There have been versions where Rapunzel knows full well why her belly is growing larger, and takes measures to hide the fact that she's with child from the witch.
85* ObliviouslyBeautiful: In many retellings and adaptations, Rapunzel doesn't know how attractive she is. Considering her ''very'' sheltered upbringing (she'd never seen a man until the Prince climbed her tower, after all), it's no surprise.
86* PlotHole: If the window is the only the entry to the tower and climbing Rapunzel's hair is the only way to get up there, how did the witch get Rapunzel in the tower in the first place? And if the witch has another way in, why doesn't she use that instead of undergoing such an arduous task? Various adaptations have answered this in various ways:
87** In ''WesternAnimation/{{Tangled}}'', Mother Gothel has a secret entrance of which Rapunzel is unaware.
88** In the ''Series/OnceUponATime'' episode "The Tower", Rapunzel climbed into the tower willingly and was then held prisoner by the witch, who was really a manifestation of her greatest fears. Later in Season 7, a different telling of the Rapunzel story has Mother Gothel build the tower around Rapunzel with magic.
89** In ''WesternAnimation/BarbieAsRapunzel'', Rapunzel's tower was originally a ground-floor bedroom, but Gothel turned it into a tower with Rapunzel inside after learning that Rapunzel managed to get around the magical barriers encircling her house.
90* PregnantBadass: Rapunzel, in the versions where she bears the Prince's kid/kids. Living alone in the desert isn't easy at the best of times, especially for a pregnant young woman who has no survival skills ''and'' has been isolated from the world by her ParentalSubstitute. She not only survives the childbirth, but manages to raise at least one kid in such an unfriendly environment.
91* PrinceCharming: Rapunzel's love interest.
92* RaceLift: ''Series/OnceUponATime'' gives Rapunzel one (and her parents by extension) where she is played by mixed race actress Alexandra Metz. What's more is that the script specifically called for a black actress to play the character.
93** Raphaela Zilberger in ''[[Literature/FairyTaleNovels Rapunzel Let Down]]'' is Hispanic.
94* RagsToRoyalty: Rapunzel came from a commoner family, but later became a princess.
95* RapidHairGrowth: In some versions of the story, Rapunzel's hair miraculously grows back to its original length (or maybe even longer) after the Prince touches it during their reunion.
96* RealityIsUnrealistic: Experiments have determined that human hair actually ''is'' strong enough to support an adult human's weight (even blonde hair, which is weaker than darker hair), as long as it's anchored to something first so that it's not pulling directly on the scalp. All early versions of the tale mention that Rapunzel ties her hair to a hook in the wall before letting someone climb it; this is seen in ''Tangled'' as well.
97* SadisticChoice: The father would not have thought lightly about stealing [[JustifiedCriminal to soothe his wife's cravings,]] or giving up his long-wanted child as restitution.
98* SayingTooMuch: In some tellings of the story, Rapunzel accidentally reveals that she's been having a visitor when she asks the witch why it's so much harder to bring her up to the tower than the Prince.
99* SecretRelationship: Rapunzel and her Prince, of course.
100* ShakingHerHairLoose: Some versions the story say that Rapunzel's long golden hair is braided or tied up 90% of the time, and it's only untied when Mother Gothel or the prince climb up it.
101** ''Tangled'' parodies it in the trailers, with Flynn doing the traditional request... and getting a face full of Rapunzel's ''very'' heavy hair.
102* ShearMenace: In some versions of the story, the Witch attacks the Prince with the same pair of scissors she used to cut off Rapunzel's hair.
103* SkyCell: Rapunzel's tower is one without a door.
104* SwissArmyTears: Rapunzel's tears unblind the Prince.
105** In the ''Dark Parables'' adaptation, one of the MultipleEndings has [[spoiler:Rapunzel using her tears to save the life of her betrothed, Prince Ross, after he falls victim to her half-sister's death magic]].
106* TeenPregnancy: In the first edition of ''Grimm's Fairy Tales'', Rapunzel gets knocked up by the Prince while heavily implied to not be out of her teenage years yet, and gives birth to two sons ([[UntoUsASonAndDaughterAreBorn in some versions a boy and a girl instead]]) after her banishment.
107** In the [[Anime/GrimmsFairyTaleClassics anime]], Rapunzel gets pregnant at sixteen, though she only has one son in a deviation from the original story.
108* TextileWorkIsFeminine: It's implied that Rapunzel is a skilled weaver, since most versions have her ask the Prince to bring her skeins of silk that she'll use to make a ladder to escape the tower with.
109* ThirstyDesert: Gothel sends Rapunzel here after finding out about the Prince's visits.
110* TraumaticHaircut: Done to Rapunzel by the witch.
111* UntoUsASonAndDaughterAreBorn: In some versions, Rapunzel gives birth to a boy and a girl.
112* WackyCravings: PlayedForDrama to kick off the plot, as Rapunzel's mother's craving for an herb is what starts the entire plot.
113* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: In most versions of the story, the witch vanishes completely from the story after blinding the prince and sending Rapunzel elsewhere. Where did she go? What happened to her? She just seems to go away, scot-free. Unless one takes the view that the cut hair fell away from the tower before she could descend, [[DeathByIrony leaving her trapped in there to die alone.]]
114** Rapunzel's parents never appear again after giving up their newborn daughter to the witch, and Rapunzel herself never finds out about them. Some adaptations (''WesternAnimation/{{Tangled}}'', ''WesternAnimation/BarbieAsRapunzel'') negate this and have her reunite with them in the end.
115* WickedWitch: In earlier versions, [[TheFairFolk a fairy.]]
116* WorldsMostBeautifulWoman: Rapunzel.
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