Famous for Fairy Tales

By Christine Stoddard
QuailBellMagazine.com

Artists--perhaps more so than any other category of people--are painfully familiar with the hopelessness and despair that finds company with broken dreams. (Either that or black clothing's good for hiding coffee stains.) Prone to developing grandiose illusions, artists often set unattainable goals, only to plummet into the angst of reality. Writer Hans Christian Andersen knew this free-fall hell quite well.


From childhood onward, he spent his days longing for a career in theater. Instead of playing with other kids, young Hans huddled up with a little puppet theater his father had built. He entertained neighbors with stories and songs. But Hans was a clunky child who grew into an even clunkier man.

Far taller and ganglier than most anyone he encountered, Hans was simply too awkward for the elegance of the 19-century Danish stage. He also repeatedly proved to be a disappointing pupil and heartbroken lover. Over and over again, his friends and mentors tried to push him into an apprenticeship, so he could support himself by learning a skilled trade. Hans retaliated each and every time, insisting that he was meant to be a great actor. Thus, more often than not, Hans subjected himself to pitiable living conditions, which he occasionally escaped thanks to others' kindness.

After many failed attempts to secure steady acting work, Hans turned to playwriting and eventually writing short stories. His inventive fairy tales gained him fame that persists around the world even today. If you grew up with “The Little Mermaid,” “The Ugly Duckling,” “The Princess and the Pea,” “Thumbelina,” “The Emperor's New Suit,” or “The Snow Queen,” you grew up with Hans Christian Andersen's brainchildren—or at least bastardized versions of them. During his lifetime, Hans published 168 fairy tales. In other words, his Plan C worked.

Fledglings, if you need some motivation after a few nasty hiccups, look at Hans. Pick up one of his fairy tales or check out a biography for the details of his early misery. In Hans' case, the answer to the fame he craved really did lie in fairy tales—the very things that had caused so many of his personal mishaps. His imagination was simply too big for other peoples' taste. That is, until he matched his imagination with discipline and got to writing what he was meant to write.

Maybe you can find a way to get your perception of truth and The Ultimate Truth to walk hand in hand like Hansie Boy did.

 


Comments

Becky Wright
10/31/2011 09:38

I am a published writer and yet I most definitely benefited from this story.

Existing as a writer is never easy and requires your heart, mind and sometimes your soul.

It is hard labor requiring your mind no matter what genre you choose, or better yet chooses you.

It's the hardest thing in the world and the best thing in the world.

Thank you for a piece I found personally inspiring.

Becky Robinette Wright
Freelance Writer and Photographer

Reply
Christine Stoddard (Editor)
10/31/2011 14:42

Dear Becky,

I'm glad this piece inspired you! The story of Hans Christian Andersen's speaks strongly to me during discouraging times. Keep writing and please consider sending submitting some of your work to QB.

Feather hugs,

Christine Stoddard
Executive Editor

Reply



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