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Sesame Street: Abby in Wonderland

What’s the Story?

Reviewed by Joly Herman

Abby Cadabby thinks she wants to live in a fairy tale when she gets big. So her friend Elmo tells her the story of Alice in Wonderland, pointing to the pictures in a book as Abby drifts off into a dream. The next thing she knows, she is chasing a rabbit that looks a lot like Elmo down a rabbit hole, and the story begins to take shape. Only this time, instead of eating strange things to grow larger or smaller, Abby must create rhymes to shrink enough to get though that tiny door. There on the other side, she meets a whole slew of familiar faces, from the Counterpilar, the Cheshire Cookie Cat, the Mad Hatter, and finally The Grouch of Hearts, who has the very thing in his possession that prevents her from getting home. Or so she thinks.

Is It Any Good?

4

"Life's not always a fairy tale ... There's not always a happy end," sing Abby and Elmo, when Abby finds herself unable to get home to her real life. But the friends who appear on her journey help to teach Abby a lesson. She begins to understand that looking forward to the day when she's bigger keeps her from noticing the beautiful little things in life, like the dewdrops on leaves, the colors in the sky, and her friends around her. Moreover, she learns that she can wake herself from a dream, which introduces an interesting concept of self control for small viewers.

Other lessons that might benefit viewers are those typical in Sesame Street productions: counting, speaking a little Spanish, exhibiting grace and courtesy, sounding out words, talking about emotions, taking responsibility for one's actions, and promoting friendship. Sometimes Abby speaks in rather a shrill voice, which might be irritating to adults within earshot, but the music is catchy and there are several clever moments in this DVD. A good choice for young fans.

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