Mary Poppins.

Mary Poppins is one of my daughter’s favorite movies, and I’ve seen it probably 30 or 40 times in the last few months. (“Watcha Poppins?” could get annoying after the hundredth time, except that she’s so excited about it that I could never hold it against her.) So I decided to take a crack at the book on which the movie is loosely based. Mind you, I was unaware that there was a book until a few months ago, and it turns out that there are eight in the series, although reportedly P.L. Travers, the Australian critic who wrote the books, hated the Disney film so much that she refused to allow them to make a sequel.

Even for an adult, the book is fun, although it’s a lot less whimsical than I would have expected from the movie. Poppins herself is not Julie Andrews’ version: She’s quite severe with the children, who are naughtier than their film counterparts, and she’s nowhere near as pretty as Julie Andrews was. Most of the anecdotes in the film come from the book, but with changes:

  • Mary and Bert (who barely appears in the book) do enter into a painting and go to a country fair, but without the children.
  • Admiral Boom, who appears a few times in the film as comic relief, appears just once in passing in the book.
  • The tea party on the ceiling comes doesn’t include the jokes that are central to the film scene. The talking dog that alerts Mary to the problem in the movie is actually part of a different story altogether in the book.
  • Katie Nanna has already quit at the start of the book.
  • Jane and Michael have twin, infant siblings who get their own story in the book.
  • The entire sequence on the rooftops appears to be original – Bert, also called the “Match Man” in the book, is clearly a longtime friend of Mary Poppins’ but only makes his appearance as a street artist, not a chimney sweep.
  • The run on Mr. Banks’ bank and Mrs. Banks’ suffragette efforts are original to the film, and in the book, Mary Poppins stays a year or so, rather than the week of the movie.

Yet at the same time, two of the best stories in the book – which is more a collection of stories than a single narrative – is omitted from the film entirely. In one, Mary takes the children to Mrs. Corry’s for gingerbread cookies, only to learn how the stars ended up in the sky. In another, the twins earn top billing, and the reader sees how infants see the world and that we lose something when we grow out of that stage of life.

The difference in Mary Poppins’ character between the book and the film is enormous. In the film, she’s there for the purpose of bringing the slightly neglectful father who is married to his work and has some rather definite ideas about family life back into the loving-father role. In the book, she’s there to trigger Jane and Michael’s imaginations and improve their behavior; Michael in particular has one story where he’s a real brat, and Mary whisks him and Jane around the world visiting “friends” of hers (they’re animals now, but in the original version were apparently people based on unflattering stereotypes).

Unlike the movie, which has a single narrative and draws you into the story and the two main characters (Mary and Bert), the book is just a collection of fun and imaginative stories that doesn’t create the same connection between the reader and the main character. So while I recommend the book because it’s fun and the magical twist in each story is usually very clever, I wasn’t sucked in the way I have been to other great children’s novels like The Phantom Tollbooth.

Comments

  1. Phantom Tollbooth was the bomb, yo.

  2. joseflanders

    You get Mary Poppins, I get The Goofy Movie.

    You, 1. Me, 0.

  3. I saw the play for Mary Poppins on Broadway this summer and was not enamored with it. While I truly loved (and still enjoy) the movie as a child (I think Dick Van Dyke is just terrific), I couldn’t help but wonder if the play was a blend of the original book and that of the Disney take on things.

    For one, they had a fantasy scene in the play where a couple of statues came to life to play with Jane and Michael. I don’t recall that in the movie. There was also another scene that was oddly creepy where the toys in the children’s room came to life and, for lack of a better description, “haunted” the children one night. Since you just read the book, Keith, are these scenes or similar story arcs in the book?

    In accordance with the movie, however, they had Bert as a chimney sweep and they did the whole dance on the rooftops thing. All in all it was entertaining and I admire the people who are able to perform these shows, but I wasn’t walking out of there eager to see it again.

  4. Although I think it’s too long for a children’s movie, Mary Poppins is one of the few movies my daughter watches that I can actually enjoy a little. I thought the Mr. Banks character from the movie was great, and it’s his character that triggers an emotional response as he is the one that grows as a person. It doesn’t sound like he has the same experiences in the book, which sounds a bit disappointing to me.

    Are the stories appropriate for reading to a 5 year old?

  5. Sutton – Yes, I’d think so. There’s nothing too scary; my one concern would be her following the stories, one of which runs about 30 pages.

    Josh – not in the first book, really, but it’s possible that those come from later books.

  6. I spend most of my life reading children’s lit, and pushing children’s lit, so now you’ve got me interested. Besides the Phantom Tollbooth, which is great, what else from the children’s lit. genre do you like? Any chance we could get a KLAW 10 for the kids?

  7. Thanks for posting about “children’s” literature. It’s a genre that is too rarely taken seriously.

    The thing that I find most striking about the movie, thematically, is that despite the suffragette theme and Mary’s authority, the narrative is really driven by the development of the males. Each of the main characters’ songs are marches, military metaphor is used throughout, and Michael is the real focus of all the scenes involving the children. In 1964, gender issues were starting to get traction; part of me suspects that this film represents Walt’s ideas about that subject.

    On a side note, did you know that “Feed the Birds” was Walt’s favorite song?

  8. Keith…did you see the Mary Poppins skit they did on SNL a couple of months ago when Anne Hathaway hosted. It’s pretty funny. I think it will make another viewing of the film a little more tolerable.

    http://www.hulu.com/watch/37754/saturday-night-live-mary-poppins

  9. Josh…this is taken from IMDB:

    Originally in the movie, there was a scene when all of the toys in the nursery come alive. Since it proved to be too scary for children, it was cut out. However, in the Broadway musical of Mary Poppins, the toys coming alive idea is used.