The Nutcracker

The Nutcracker is one of the most beloved Christmas stories of all time. It has been adapted into a ballet, as well as many television and movie adaptations.

Original story
The story of "The Nutcracker" is adapted from a story written in 1816 by called The Nutcracker and the Mouse King, which tells the magical tale of a young girl whose Christmas gift, a nutcracker, comes alive.

Hoffmann's story is of a young man, nephew of an inventor called Herr Drosselmeyer, who fails to complete the task required to marry the princess. As a result, he is cursed by being turned into a "nutcracker" with a large head, wide grinning mouth, and beard. She rejects him for being ugly and he is banished. Herr Drosselmeyer gives his goddaughter Marie a nutcracker for Christmas and tells her the tale. After various "dreams" in which it comes to life and they defeat the evil Mouse King, Marie tells it that she would never reject him as the princess did but would love him no matter how ugly he was. This breaks the spell and Herr Drosselmeyer arrives with his nephew, magically restored to his handsome self. He marries Marie and takes her away to the magical kingdom.

The Ballet
In 1892, Pytor Ilytch Tchaikovsky set a variation of Hoffmann's story by French author Alexandre Dumas to music. Then, together with renowned choreographer Marius Petipa (working with Lev Ivanov) they created the ballet "The Nutcracker."

The first act begins with a Christmas party at the house of a young girl named Clara's family. Her godfather, Herr Drosselmeyer, brings a bunch of amazing toys as gifts, and they all dance. Clara receives a toy nutcracker as a gift and is enchanted by it.

Clara falls asleep with her nutcracker and a dream sequence begins in which it comes to life, a bunch of mice appear, and a big battle ensues with toy soldiers coming to life. The Mouse King and his army is defeated and Clara goes off on a tour of a magical land with the nutcracker who has become a prince. The second act is a series of exotic dances there, some of which can be pretty amazing (the Sugar Plum Fairy is one of the attractions) and the music is quite glorious. The conclusion is usually Clara waking up in her chair, still holding the nutcracker; it was all a dream.

In the 1950s, famous choreographer George Balachine created a new version for the New York City Ballet. Many major ballet companies in North America (and some others worldwide) have adopted this version as their own.

Television versions of the ballet

 * The Nutcracker (1968) - Rudolph Nuryev and Dame Merle Park (Royal Ballet).
 * The Nutcracker (1977) - Mikail Baryshnikov and Gesley Kirkland (American Ballet Theatre).
 * The Nutcracker on Ice (1998) - Tai Babilonia, Randy Gardner, Linda Frattiane
 * The Nutcracker (2001) - Hosted by Dame Julie Andrews. (Royal Ballet)
 * San Francisco Ballet's Nutcracker (2008) -Hosted by Kristi Yamaguchi. (San Francisco Ballet)

Movie Versions

 * Nutcracker (1986 film) (Pacific Northwest Ballet) (better known as Nutcracker: the Motion Picture)
 * The Nutcracker Prince (1990 animated film) - featuring the voices of Peter O'Toole and Kiefer Sutherland
 * George Balachine's The Nutcracker (1993) - Jessica Lynn Cohen and Macaulay Culkin (New York City Ballet)
 * Tom and Jerry: A Nutcracker Tale (1997, direct to video animated film) - Animated feature starring MGM's famous cat-and-mouse duo.
 * Barbie in The Nutcracker (2001, direct to video CGI animated film)

TV episodes or specials based on the story and/or ballet

 * The Enchanted Nutcracker (1961) - A musical play version starring Robert Goulet and Carol Lawrence
 * Disney's The Nutcracker (1999) - An animated short featuring Mickey Mouse; based loosely on a earlier stage show at.
 * The Nutcracker Suite (2002) - An interstitial short starring Cosmo and Wanda from The Fairly OddParents.
 * The Nutcracker (Super Why!) (2009)