Parents Share 5 Modern Fairytale Twists You Can Tell Your Kids

Hundreds of parents are changing the endings because they're not PC.

Parents have shared how they alter classic fairytales when reading them to their children, as inspiration for other mums and dads who don’t feel the traditional stories are suitable for today’s world.

A quarter of parents feel some of the stories aren’t politically correct, while a further quarter said they worried the narratives are too scary for their kids, according to a poll of 2,000 parents by musicMagpie.

The research found almost one in four parents thought it was inappropriate to tell children the story of Cinderella, who was forced to do all of the cleaning and household chores by her step-mother. More than a third believed it’s “cruel” the Gingerbread Man was eaten by a fox, while another 36% were concerned by how the Pied Piper of Hamlin tricked children into following him.

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evgenyatamanenko via Getty Images

If you wondered what endings are being told, here are five alternative endings, as suggested by parents:  

The Princess And The Pea

The story of a prince who wants to marry a princess, but is having difficulty finding a suitable wife. One woman claims to be a princess, so the prince’s mother decides to test her by placing a pea in the bed she is offered for the night, covered by 20 mattresses. She notices it. Only a real princess would have the sensitivity to feel a pea, so the two are married.

“It’s all a bit random, so I decided to tell my seven-year-old that after the princess married the prince, she was kind of annoyed about the pea situation,” mum Tessa Coadith told HuffPost UK. “When they got married, the princess started putting things in his bed, like spoons, toy cars and hairbrushes. He never noticed, she found it funny though.”

The Three Little Pigs

The story ends with the pigs outwitting the wolf when he threatens to come down the chimney to eat them. Some parents consider the image of the wolf being burned alive in the boiling cauldron they place in the fireplace “too graphic”.

Parents told MusicMagpie that they often change the ending so the wolf is just left to go hungry instead of being killed, or so he becomes a reformed character and wants to befriend the pigs instead of eat them.

Little Red Riding Hood

In this classic, a Big Bad Wolf wants to eat a young girl so he secretly stalks her, swallows her grandmother whole and waits for the girl, disguised as the grandma. A passing woodsman saves Little Red Riding Hood and kills the wolf, who spits out the grandma. (Note, in some versions, the wolf is not killed).

Many of the parents surveyed changed this ending so Little Red Riding Hood makes friends with the wolf, rather than helping to kill him. One parent said: “Little Red Riding Hood and her grandma teach the wolf that it’s wrong to trick people. They make friends with the wolf and he ends up bringing the grandma food the next day and visits her once a week.”

The Frog Prince

After watching ‘The Princess And The Frog’ (a film loosely based on the novel The Frog Prince) some felt uncomfortable with the message that marriage will solve everything.

The Disney film tells the story of a hardworking waitress who dreams of owning her own restaurant. After kissing a prince who has been turned into a frog, she becomes a frog herself and must find a way to turn back into a human before it is too late. In the end, they decide they are content to live together as frogs and they are married. But being married to a Prince makes the waitress a princess and so after they kiss, they are restored to human form.

Mum Catherine Parker told HuffPost UK: “I tell my daughter the princess didn’t want to admit it, but she actually preferred the prince as a frog. She just wanted a pet. She managed to turn herself back into a human, but kept him as a frog-pet and they lived happily ever after (you don’t have to be married to have a happy life!).”

The Gingerbread Man

In the Gingerbread Man, a tragic turn of events means that the poor biscuit ends up being eaten by a fox, which some parents think is a bit brutal and scary for their little ones. One parent in the survey said: “Instead, we imagine him escaping on a plane to an exotic country where he eventually settles on a desert island beach.” 

Before You Go

Empowering Reads For Children
She Persisted by Chelsea Clinton(01 of08)
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Clinton's book features the stories of 12 girls and women who “didn’t take no for an answer” and changed the world.
Age range: Four- to eight-years-old.
Buy: £9. Amazon.
(credit:Twitter)
Princess Smartypants by Babette Cole(02 of08)
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Cole's main character is a princess who does not wants to get married and wants to find her independence. So that's exactly what she does.
Age range: three- to five-year-olds.
Buy: Amazon, £5.
(credit:Amazon)
The Wonderful Things You Will Be(03 of08)
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An illustrated book that has the messaging you can be who you want to be, you'll be brilliant and people will love you whatever.
Age range: Three- to seven-year-olds.
Buy: Amazon, £14.99.
(credit:Amazon)
Goodnight Stories For Rebel Girls(04 of08)
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Dubbed a 'feminist bedtime book', this book introduces kids to 100 remarkable women and their extraordinary lives. It aims to be "empowering, moving and inspirational".
Age range: Three- to 18-year-olds.
Buy: Amazon, £14.
(credit:Amazon)
The Boy Who Cried Fabulous(05 of08)
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Main character Roger describes most things as "fabulous", but his parents ban it from his vocabulary. This book shows children supporting Roger with his describing words and all the "fabulous" things he has to say.
Age range: Three- to seven-year-olds.
Buy: Amazon, £2.
(credit:Amazon)
Rose Revere, Engineer(06 of08)
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Rose breaks a stereotype of young girls and dreams of becoming a great engineer. She works with her aunt on an invention and despite it not going the way she planned, she's reminded you can only truly fail if you quit.
Age range: five- to seven-year-olds.
Buy: Amazon, £7.69.
(credit:Amazon)
Not All Princesses Dress in Pink(07 of08)
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A book that shows princesses "come in all kinds", showing girls jumping in mud puddles, climbing trees, playing sports and making messes - all while wearing their tiaras.
Age range: Four- to eight-year-olds.
Buy: Amazon, £13.
(credit:Amazon)
Free to Be: You and Me(08 of08)
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This book celebrates individuality and challenges gender stereotypes of boys and girls, hoping to empower kids to be who they want to be - not who they're told to be.
Age range: Three years old and up.
Buy: Amazon, £11.99.
(credit:Amazon)