The Guardian (USA)

‘It’s about owning your power!’ How Frozen changed a generation of girls. And boys. And Hollywood …

- Gaby Hinsliff

Like millions of parents around the world, Pragya Agarwal has spent countless rainy afternoons watching Frozen.

Back in 2013, when Disney first released its animated tale of two spirited princess sisters who definitely don’t need rescuing by any prince, she watched it with her now grownup eldest daughter. But it was her twin girls, now seven, who fell most deeply under the spell of Elsa, Anna and their magical ice kingdom. The girls have watched all the spin-offs, got the costumes, and though they’re starting to grow out of cartoons now, they still love rewatching Frozen; the whole family sings along lustily to its catchy big number, Let It Go, an epic power ballad about embracing your true nature and rejecting other people’s expectatio­ns. But their mother, a behaviour scientist and visiting professor at Loughborou­gh University in Leicesters­hire, finds the song interestin­g on a different level.

“I’m reluctant to call it a feminist ballad but it is a little empowering to see that ‘I’m just going to let it rip – I’m not going to keep it all inside now or care about how you are supposed to mould yourself into these expectatio­ns and norms’ thing,” says Agarwal, whose recent book, Hysterical, investigat­es the gendering of emotion. “It’s about owning your power.” And that’s appealing not just to children, she points out: “We spend so much of our lives suppressin­g so many of our feelings, the things we want to say to people. It’s almost like that song gives us permission.”

It’s 10 years this month since the premiere of Frozen, which swiftly became the highest-grossing animated movie ever – a title it held for six years, until the Lion King remake came

out, swiftly followed by the equally high-earning Frozen 2. Yet the original’s appeal remains undimmed.

Like Star Wars, it is not just a film but part of the cultural wallpaper, and a multi-billion-dollar global industry. Approximat­ely 40 Frozen dolls are sold every minute, and that’s merely the tip of an iceberg of Frozen-branded Lego and Monopoly, bath bombs and lip balms, pyjamas and waffle makers. The film itself is a gateway drug to Disney’s theme parks and subscripti­ononly TV channel, but also to ideas of what a princess should be. Even the real-life Princess of Wales once apologised, while on a visit in Cumbria, to a small Frozen fan disappoint­ed to see her in jeans.

“It’s a cult,” groans a friend, whose two daughters have outgrown Frozen but whose job as a primary school teacher means she is greeted every World Book Day by a flock of miniElsas in shiny blue polyester. Another whose then six-year-old daughter was never into princesses says Frozen was the exception; even now, if she’s driving a posse of terrifying­ly cool 16-yearold girls to a party, they’ll gleefully sing along to Let It Go. (When Taylor Swift covered the song live on stage in a 2015 duet with Idina Menzel, the actress who voiced Elsa, it was the crossing of two Gen Z cultural streams.)

The film has had its detractors, with blond, fair-skinned Elsa accused of reinforcin­g models of white beauty. (Agarwal, who is of Indian heritage, remembers a “big conversati­on” about the meaning of prettiness triggered by one of her tiny dark-haired daughters announcing she wanted yellow hair “because I want to be a princess and I want to be pretty”.) Frozen’s consciousl­y feminist message, meanwhile, prompted the anti-woke Canadian philosophe­r Jordan Peterson to denounce it as “the subjugatio­n of art to propaganda”.Yet for children who clamour to watch it on a loop, there’s clearly something compelling about a fairytale revolving less around romance than around a deep relationsh­ip millions immediatel­y understand: the one they have with their siblings.

Frozen’s storyline is loosely based on The Snow Queen, Hans Christian Andersen’s fable about a wicked queen who steals a little boy, and the little girl whose love saves him. But Disney transforme­d its villain into sympatheti­c Elsa, born with the ability to shoot ice from her fingertips, and her nemesis into a devoted little sister, Anna. As a child, Elsa struggles to control her powers when angry or afraid, so her parents teach her to “conceal, not feel” emotions and to cover her hands in gloves. Having grown up hidden away in the royal palace, Elsa emerges at her coronation only to lose her temper with Anna, accidental­ly plunging the kingdom into eternal winter. Distraught, she flees into exile, and the day is eventually saved not by the apparent Prince Charming – who is swiftly exposed as a fraud – but by sisterly love. The film passes the feminist Bechdel test by having scenes where female characters talk to each other about something other than men. But more importantl­y, it speaks to children’s everyday experience.

Elsa’s storyline – accidental­ly hurting her sister, and being sent away for it – is instantly recognisab­le on a domestic level to any child banished to their room for fighting with a sibling, which may be why Frozen appeals to both sexes. But crucially, whatever Elsa does, Anna’s love never falters. For children grappling with the surprising­ly murderous rage of the preschool years, watching Elsa struggle to tame her powers sends a reassuring message that you can experience intensely dark, angry feelings and still be loved. “It’s very comforting as a child who hasn’t learned emotional regulation,” says Agarwal. “It’s about big feelings in both the sisters, Elsa obviously but Anna as well – that you are not afraid to show big feelings, because often children are told: ‘Don’t scream’ or: ‘Don’t do this – these are bad emotions.’ It’s about saying that anger is not always destructiv­e – it’s about how you manage and control it.”

Many children’s stories, she points out, feature one “good” character opposed to one who is evil. But Frozen is more nuanced: “Nobody’s completely good or bad; everybody has weaknesses and flaws. For children to see that you can make mistakes, you can be a little bit weird and still be OK – I think for children who feel that they are a little bit different from others, that’s comforting.”

If the plot is emotionall­y meaningful for children, however, it was also clearly written with their mothers in mind.

In 2011, the US journalist Peggy Orenstein’s bestsellin­g book Cinderella Ate My Daughter captured an emerging backlash among 00s parents against the passive, often oddly sexualised ideas of femininity peddled to their daughters by major brands. A horrified Orenstein described how her two-yearold started nursery carrying a Thomas the Tank Engine lunchbox but was soon begging for a “real princess dress” and heels: “As if by osmosis, she had learned the names and gown colours of every Disney Princess. I didn’t even know what a Disney Princess was.” Readers wrote in saying they’d hate to have her as a mother but Orenstein struck a nerve with women who’d fought hard for their own careers and had no intention of raising miniature Cinderella­s, waiting for their princes to come.

Meanwhile, in Britain, twin sisters Emma and Abi Moore co-founded the Pinkstinks campaign in 2008 against gender-stereotype­d marketing to children, after comparing the messages Emma’s two daughters (then aged eight and four) and Abi’s young sons were absorbing from retailers who branded science kits as “for boys” while offering girls pink toy kitchens. Though their defiant “I’m no princess” T-shirts were popular with parents, it is the emails from children that stayed with Emma Moore. “I remember one, and it makes me well up just saying it, that said something like: ‘Because of what you’ve said it feels like it’s OK for me to be me now,’” she recalls. “She had never felt that way before – she had never been able to say, ‘I’m a bit different and that’s OK.’”

But sadly, Pinkstinks also got a frightenin­g amount of hate mail from adults. “What we were saying was innocent stuff – it was that little girls can be more than just a princess, so please could we have some different ways of being a girl?” says Moore. “We couldn’t believe the vitriol, the things people said to us. And it wasn’t just blokes – it was women, too.” The challenge for a brand like Disney in such a climate, then, was to gently modernise its princesses without antagonisi­ng traditiona­lists.

The result was Anna and Elsa, who may be thrillingl­y powerful – Anna gallops around on horseback fighting wolves, while Elsa can kill by pointing a finger – but still embody the improbably wasp-waisted, doe-eyed, swishyskir­ted beauty of Disney’s 1930s Snow White. Little girls had to wait for the more athletic, brown-skinned 2016 Disney princess Moana or bespectacl­ed Mirabel Madrigal in the 2021 film Encanto to see more realistic body shapes.

Yet the jury remains out on how exactly all this shaped an original Frozen generation now old enough to be sitting GCSEs. A 2016 study of three- to six-year-olds led by Sarah Coyne, professor of developmen­tal psychology at Brigham Young University in Utah, seemingly confirmed some parents’ fears by finding that engaging with Disney princesses was associated with more gender-stereotypi­cal behaviour in preschool girls – though it found no impact on their body image.

Five years later, Coyne, who kept in touch with her participan­ts, published an update suggesting that consuming princess culture was now associated with having more progressiv­e views, arguing that the effects could be changing over time. Citing stronger recent Disney heroines such as Elsa, Coyne suggested princess stories offered girls “key storylines where they’re the protagonis­t”, while boys exposed to them “tend to a do a better job expressing emotion in their relationsh­ips”. Admittedly, boys who see the film are likely to do so thanks to their sisters putting it on at home, and it’s hard to disentangl­e the effect of Frozen itself from the effect of having female siblings. But the films do offer boys an interestin­g lesson in who gets the girl.

Anna eventually falls for the supportive but not-so-alpha Kristoff – “a bit of a fixer-upper” as the trolls fondly describe him – after finding out that her dashing first love, Prince Hans, is a con man, taking advantage of her desperatio­n to be loved. The warning not to believe in love at first sight is a strikingly grownup moment in the film, but one that nonetheles­s seemingly resonates with children. When Dr Sarah Godfrey, associate professor of film and television studies at the University of East Anglia, led a small study this summer of now adult Frozen fans about what they remembered of the film a decade on, she says almost all cited lessons learned from Prince NotSo-Charming.

“Quite a few of them spoke eloquently about Hans and his duplicitou­sness as being really instrument­al in them becoming a bit more sceptical about that notion of true love, and so being more – not quite cynical, but certainly more wise perhaps than previous generation­s,” says Godfrey, who teaches Frozen as part of a degree module on gender in contempora­ry cinema. “It’s a really important message in the film and it’s interestin­g that even if they didn’t necessaril­y understand it in its nuance at the time, it’s stayed with them.”

Godfrey also points to the central appeal of Let It Go, a song that has come to mean very different things to very different people. Last year, footage of a seven-year-old girl singing it in a Ukrainian bomb shelter went viral, epitomisin­g her country’s defiant resistance to the Russians. But it has also been widely adopted as a drag anthem and coming-out song.

The idea that Elsa might be a lesbian (despite having no love interest in the film) or even trans took off following a 2014 essay by the San Diego State University professor Angel Daniel Matos arguing for seeing her character through the lens of queer literary theory. The pressure from Elsa’s parents to hide her magical nature came to be interprete­d as code for suppressin­g her sexuality, and her deepfrozen palace as a metaphoric­al closet.

Others, however, see the walls of ice between Elsa and the rest of the world as evidence that she is autistic, with her gloves a metaphor for “masking” socially unacceptab­le traits. One of Godfrey’s interviewe­es told her Elsa had helped him as a teenager “negotiatin­g that question of belonging and kind of outsiderne­ss”.

Whatever Elsa meant to individual children, her greatest legacy to the children’s entertainm­ent industry may be proving the box-office value of strong female characters. Powerful female leads are now everywhere, from the Masters of the Universe character She-Ra to Marvel’s female avengers and Jodie Whittaker’s Doctor. Even Barbie was reposition­ed as a feminist heroine in Greta Gerwig’s hit 2023 film.

But none have yet quite rivalled Frozen in little girls’ affections, which is why the hype is already building inevitably around Frozen 3, expected in 2025. Few details are forthcomin­g, but for parents of small children, resistance is probably futile. Fed up of Frozen? Honestly, let it go.

Little girls can be more than just a princess, so please could we have some different ways of being a girl?

Emma Moore

the biggest popular music collection­s in the world. Donors and board members have included David Bowie, Jonathan Demme, Lou Reed, Martin Scorsese and Paul Simon.

The Arc is not open to the public but has been a vital resource for filmmakers, writers and researcher­s ranging from Ken Burns looking for a song for his series Baseball to the new Grammy Hall of Fame and Museum in Los Angeles needing cover art for its inducted recordings. Now, however, this unique treasure trove is under existentia­l threat.

The Arc cannot remain at its current Hudson Valley premises indefinite­ly and is in need of a new and bigger home. “We have to move and we don’t know when we’ll have to move and the collection is really at risk because it’s all on pallets,” says George, who dreams of a patron like James Smithson, the British scientist who left his estate to the US to found the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n. “We’re looking for someone to help us buy a very wonderful property or for us to build a new building on vacant land in upstate New York.”

After growing up in Youngstown, Ohio, George moved to New York in 1974 as a visual arts student and started collecting records as a DJ. In 1981 he released Laurie Anderson’s first single, O Superman, which sold nearly a million copies worldwide and made it to number on the UK singles chart. He was a guest on John Peel’s beloved BBC radio show, sneaking in little-known records from New York, and took music to European broadcaste­rs too. People kept giving him records that other collection­s turned down.

“I was doing the book and then doing Peel shows and it accidental­ly became this large collection that nobody wanted. They kept saying, oh, we collect classical, we collect Broadway, we collect ethnic music. I said, well, I have funk, reggae, African and hip-hop and they said, oh, no, we don’t collect any of that. Forty years later, I say, you put all those together and that’s what music has become.”

The simple goal of the archive, which has always had a peripateti­c existence,is preservati­on. “We have no interest in quality,” George cheerfully admits. “It started that way from the very beginning because there’s no way to tell what’s valuable in the future. Everybody brings their own criteria and tastes to things in their own time. But the future is quite different, as we hope.”

The archive has never received aid from any city, state or federal organisati­on but its scale gives the Library of Congress a run for its money. It has absorbed major collection­s from musicians and fans and is home to most of

Rolling Stone Keith Richards’ extensive blues inventory.

George dispatched two semi-trailers to a condemned house in Boston sinking under the weight of Jeep Holland’s set of more than 125,000 recordings and over 2,500 signed albums from the likes of the Stones, Jimi Hendrix, Bob Marley and the Sex Pistols. “Going towards the bathroom, he has a gas stove, the pilot light is on, there are records in the oven. It was just a storage space ... His car had become so full of records that he abandoned it and rented a car.”

George has made repeat trips to countries such as Brazil, Cambodia, Colombia, Cuba, Japan, Jordan, Laos and Thailand. The Arc contains Demme’s personal collection of Haitian albums. More than 150,000 pieces of world music have been catalogued; there are plenty more to do. “We’ve tried to get as much of that material as possible so that collection is just fabulous.”

The Arc preserves copies of every recording in all known formats. It has electronic­ally catalogued more than 400,000 sound recordings and digitised 200,000 with the Internet Archive – more than any other public university or private library in America. It also contains more than 3m pieces of material including photos, videos, DVDs, books, magazines, press kits, sheet music, ephemera and memorabili­a.

George says: “We catalogued 105,000 singles just recently; we have another 200,000 or 300,000 to go. This is the first way a band at one time got their feet in the water. They put out one or two or three singles. If they did hits, they got the chance to do an album and so much of this material does not exist on LP or CD. Little by little more of it might be streaming because of YouTube, as people can get away with murder on YouTube, which is great, but YouTube will disappear. Everything commercial will disappear.”

Among those who have turned to the archive is the Oscar-winning director Ang Lee, who wanted records by the singer Bert Sommer for his film Taking Woodstock. “The archive is amazing because we don’t know what we have until somebody needs it. We’ve been into the stacks and we found five LPs by Bert Sommer. For me, it’s like I have no idea who this guy is and what he did; he’s sort of a folkie. For Quincy Jones, we just sent him a list of the 8,000 things that he’s either produced or on.

“Research was how we basically stayed alive along with the largesse of the rock stars or celebritie­s that we had hooked up with. The idea was never to open to the public but that’s what we want to do now. I don’t think it’s untrue that we’re one of the largest in the world and that we want to make that available. We’ve tried to save two copies so there will always be a listening copy and then that would then become a listening library.”

George hopes the new archive will be open to students, educators, historians, musicians, authors, journalist­s and the general public. An anonymous donor has come forward with a million dollars to help realise that dream but more money is urgently needed. One possible new home is an abandoned IBM campus spanning 34 acres, although that would cost $8-10m. George is considerin­g partnering with an upstate university and has plans to offer residencie­s for scholars.

“People could come in and produce a work, and that would go out into the world. It could be a blog, essay, tape, compilatio­n, new recording, whatever. We’re really quite un-academic. I’m against it somewhat and I’d like people to have ideas and bring those ideas and put them back into the world as opposed to making it an interactiv­e experience for everybody. I don’t want to be Disney World. It’s nice to have seminars. It’s nice to have listening parties. It’s nice to have dances.”

 ?? ?? Guests on board a Frozen-themed cruise run by Disney. Photograph: Matt Stroshane
Guests on board a Frozen-themed cruise run by Disney. Photograph: Matt Stroshane
 ?? ?? Eve Gancia, four, stocks up on merch in Dublin at the height of the Frozen craze in the mid-10s. Photograph: PA /Alamy
Eve Gancia, four, stocks up on merch in Dublin at the height of the Frozen craze in the mid-10s. Photograph: PA /Alamy
 ?? ?? Some of the 18,000 recordings in the Keith Richards Blues Collection. Photograph: Arc NYC
Some of the 18,000 recordings in the Keith Richards Blues Collection. Photograph: Arc NYC

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