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Traditional Plot

The story begins in Tuscany, Italy. A carpenter Master Antonio, but whom everyone calls
Master Cherry for his bright shiny red nose, has found a block of pinewood which he plans to
carve into a leg for his table. When he begins, however, the log shouts out, "Don't strike me
too hard!"

Frightened by the talking log, Master Cherry does not know what to do until his neighbor
Geppetto, known for disliking children who call him "Polendina", drops by looking for a piece
of wood to build a marionette; seeing a perfect opportunity, Antonio gives the block to
Geppetto. As Geppetto carves the puppet, the nose begins to grow. Geppetto is extremely
poor and plans to make a living as a puppeteer in hopes of earning some food to eat. He carves
the block into a boy and names him Pinocchio.

As soon as Pinocchio's nose has been carved, it begins to grow with his congenital impudence.
Before he is even built, Pinocchio already has a mischievous attitude; no sooner than Geppetto
is finished carving Pinocchio's feet does the puppet proceed to kick him. Once the puppet has
been finished and Geppetto teaches him to walk, Pinocchio runs out the door and away into
the town.

He is caught by a Carabiniere, but when people say that Geppetto dislikes children, the
carabineer assumes that Pinocchio has been treated poorly and imprisons Geppetto.

Left alone, Pinocchio heads back to Geppetto's house to get something to eat. Once he arrives
at home, the Talking Cricket who has lived in the house for over a century tells him that boys
who do not obey their parents grow up to be donkeys. In retaliation, Pinocchio throws a
hammer at the cricket, more accurately than he intended to, and accidentally kills it.

Unable to find food in the house, Pinocchio ventures to a neighbor's house to beg for food.
The neighbor is annoyed by Pinocchio's pleas because it is late at night and he tells him to
"come underneath and hold out your cap". He then proceeds to pour an enormous basin of
water on him. Pinocchio returns home freezing and tries to warm himself by placing his feet
upon the stove. The next morning he wakes to find that his feet have burnt off. His father, who
has been released from jail and has with him three pears for a meal, makes his son a new pair
of feet.

Since Pinocchio says he is starving, Geppetto gives him the pears and teaches Pinocchio to
waste nothing. In gratitude, Pinocchio promises to go to school. Since Geppetto has no money
to buy school books, he sells his only coat. Pinocchio heads off to school, but on the way he
hears music and crowds. Curious, he follows the sounds until he finds himself in a crowd of
people, all congregated to see the Great Marionette Theater.

Unable to withstand the urge, he sells his school book for tickets to the show. During the
performance, the puppets Harlequin, Punch, and Signora Rosaura (who are on stage) see
Pinocchio and stop acting, crying out, "It is our brother Pinocchio!" While the puppets rejoice,
however, the audience grows angry, and the theater director, Mangiafuoco, comes out to see
what is going on.

Upset, he breaks up the excitement and decides to use Pinocchio as firewood to cook his lamb
dinner. After Pinocchio pleads to be saved, Mangiafuoco gives in and decides to burn
Harlequin. After Pinocchio pleads for Harlequin's salvation, Mangiafuoco gives up. When he
learns about Pinocchio's poor father, he gives the marionette five gold pieces for Geppetto.
As Pinocchio heads home to give the coins to his father, he meets a fox and a cat on the side of
the road. They tell him that if he plants his coins in the Field of Miracles, outside the city of
Catchfools, then they will grow into a tree with a thousand gold coins. Believing them,
Pinocchio heads off on a journey to Catchfools with the Cat and Fox. On the way, they stop at
the Inn of the Red Crayfish, where the Fox and Cat gorge themselves on food at Pinocchio's
expense.

During the night, the innkeeper wakes Pinocchio, saying that the Fox and Cat have left on an
emergency, but will meet Pinocchio in Catchfools. As Pinocchio sets off for Catchfools, the
ghost of the Talking Cricket appears, telling him to go home and give the coins to his father.
Pinocchio ignores him again, however, and sets off for Catchfools.

As he passes through a forest, the Fox and Cat, disguised as bandits, jump out and try to rob
Pinocchio. The marionette hides the coins in his mouth and runs up a tree, but the bandits
kindle a fire underneath it. Pinocchio jumps down and they try to pry his mouth open, but he
bites the Cat's hand off and escapes deeper into the forest. As Pinocchio runs through the
forest, he sees a white house ahead.

Stopping to knock on the door, he is greeted by a young Fairy with Turquoise Hair. However, as
he speaks to her, the bandits catch him and hang him in a tree. After a while the Fox and Cat
get tired of waiting for the marionette to suffocate and leave.

The blue-haired fairy sends a falcon and a poodle to rescue Pinocchio, and she calls in three
famous doctors to tell her if Pinocchio is dead. The first two (an owl and a crow) are uncertain,
but the third—the Talking Cricket that Pinocchio presumably killed earlier — knows that
Pinocchio is fine and tells the marionette that he has been disobedient and hurt his father.

The Blue-haired Fairy asks Pinocchio where the gold coins are. Pinocchio lies, saying he has lost
them. As he tells this lie (and more) his nose begins to grow until it is so long he cannot turn
around in the room. The Fairy explains to Pinocchio that it is his lies that are making his nose
grow long, then calls in a flock of woodpeckers to chisel down his nose.

Pinocchio and the Blue-haired Fairy decide to become brother and sister, and the Fairy sends
for Geppetto to come live with them in the forest. Pinocchio heads out to meet his father, but
on the way he meets the fox and cat again (whom he had not recognized as the bandits, even
though he has a hint from the cat's bandaged front paw—which he had bitten earlier; the fox
tells him the cat had shown mistaken kindness to a wolf).

They remind Pinocchio of the Field of Miracles, and finally he agrees to go with them and plant
his gold. After half a day's journey, they reach the city of Catchfools. Everyone in the town has
done something exceedingly foolish and now suffers as a result. When they reach the "Field of
Miracles", Pinocchio buries his gold then runs off to wait the twenty minutes it will take for his
gold to grow.

After twenty minutes he returns, only to find no tree and—even worse—no gold coins.
Realizing what has happened, he goes to Catchfools and tells the judge about the fox and cat.
The judge (as is the custom in Catchfools) sends Pinocchio to prison for his foolishness.

While in prison, however, the emperor of Catchfools declares a celebration, and all prisoners
are set free. As Pinocchio heads back to the forest, he finds an enormous serpent with a
smoking tail blocking the way. After some confusion, he asks the serpent to move, but the
serpent remains completely still.
Concluding that it is dead, Pinocchio begins to step over it, but the serpent suddenly rises up
and hisses at the marionette, toppling him over onto his head. Struck by Pinocchio's fright and
comical position, the snake laughs so hard, it bursts an artery and dies.

While sneaking into a farmer's yard to take some grapes, Pinocchio is caught in a weasel trap.
When the farmer comes out and finds Pinocchio, he ties him up in a doghouse to guard his
chicken coop. That night, a group of weasels come and tell Pinocchio that they had made a
deal with former watchdog Melampo to let them raid the chicken coop if he could have a
chicken. Pinocchio says he wants two chickens, so the weasels agree and go into the
henhouse. Pinocchio then locks the door and barks loudly.

The farmer gets the weasels and frees Pinocchio as a reward. Pinocchio comes to where the
cottage was and finds nothing but a gravestone. Believing the Blue-haired Fairy died from
sorrow, he weeps until a friendly pigeon offers to give him a ride to the seashore, where
Geppetto is building a boat to go out and search for Pinocchio. They fly to the seashore and
Pinocchio sees Geppetto out in a boat.

The puppet leaps into the water and tries to swim to Geppetto, but the waves are too rough
and Pinocchio is washed underwater as Geppetto is swallowed by a terrible shark.

A kindly dolphin gives Pinocchio a ride to the nearest island, which is the Island of Busy Bees.
Everyone is working and no one will give Pinocchio any food as long as he will not help them.
He finally offers to carry a lady's jug home in return for food and water.

When they get to the house, Pinocchio recognizes the lady as the Blue-haired Fairy, now
miraculously old enough to be his mother. She says she will act as Pinocchio's mother and
Pinocchio will begin going to school. She hints that if Pinocchio does well in school he will
become a real boy.

Pinocchio starts school the next day and after showing his determination becomes a friend to
all the schoolboys. A while later a group of boys trick Pinocchio into playing hookey by saying
they saw a large whale at the beach. Hoping that it is the shark that swallowed Geppetto, he
accompanies them to the beach only to find he has been fooled.

He begins fighting with the boys and one boy grabs a schoolbook of Pinocchio's and throws it
at him. The marionette ducks and the book hits another boy named Eugene, who is knocked
out. The other boys flee while Pinocchio tries to revive Eugene. Then two policemen come up
and accuse Pinocchio of injuring Eugene. Before he can explain, the policemen grab him to
take him to jail — but he escapes and is chased into the sea by the police dog. The dog starts
to drown and Pinocchio saves him. The dog is grateful and promises to be Pinocchio's friend.
Pinocchio happily starts swimming to shore.

Then The Green Fisherman catches Pinocchio in his net and starts to eat the fish, saying
Pinocchio must be a very special fish. Taking off the marionette's clothes and covering him
with flour, the ogre prepares to eat Pinocchio. The police dog then comes in and rescues
Pinocchio from the ogre. On the way home, Pinocchio stops at a man's house and asks about
Eugene. The man says Eugene is fine, but that Pinocchio must be a truant. Pinocchio says that
he is always truthful and obedient. Again his nose grows longer and Pinocchio immediately
tells the truth about himself, causing the nose to shrink back to normal.

Pinocchio gets home in the middle of the night. He knocks on the door and a snail opens the
third-story window. Pinocchio pleads to be let in and the snail says he will come down. Since a
snail is slow, it takes all night for the snail to come down and let Pinocchio in. By the time the
snail comes down Pinocchio has banged his foot against the door and gotten stuck. The snail
brings Pinocchio artificial food and the marionette faints. When he wakes, he is on the couch
and the Fairy says she will give him another chance.

Pinocchio does excellently in school and passes with high honors. The Fairy promises that
Pinocchio will be a real boy next day and says he should invite all his friends to a party. He goes
to invite everyone, but he is sidetracked when he meets a boy named Romeo—nicknamed
Lampwick because he is so tall and skinny. Lampwick is about to go to a place called Toyland,
where everyone plays all day and never works.

Pinocchio goes along with him and they have a wonderful time in the land of Play—until one
morning Pinocchio awakes with donkey ears. A Squirrel tells him that boys who do nothing but
play and never work always grow into donkeys. Within a short while Pinocchio has become a
donkey. He is sold to a circus and is trained to do all kinds of tricks.

Then one night in the circus he falls and sprains his leg. The circus owner sells the donkey to a
man who wants to skin him and make a drum. The man throws the donkey into the sea to
drown him — and brings up a living wooden boy. Pinocchio explains that the fish ate all the
donkey skin off of him and he is now a marionette again. Pinocchio dives back into the water
and swims out to sea — when he is swallowed by The Terrible Shark.

Inside the shark Pinocchio meets a tuna who is resigned to the fate and just says they will have
to wait to be digested. Pinocchio sees a light from far off and he follows the light. At the other
end is Geppetto, who had been living on a ship that was also in the shark. Pinocchio and
Geppetto and the tuna manage to get out from inside the shark and Pinocchio heroically
attempts to swim with Geppetto to shore, which turns out to be too far; however, the tuna
rescues them and brings them to shore. Pinocchio and Geppetto try to find a place to stay.

They pass two beggars, who are the fox and the cat. They plead for food or money, but
Pinocchio will give them nothing. They arrive at a small house, and living there is the Talking
Cricket, who says they can stay. Pinocchio gets a job doing work for a farmer, whose donkey is
dying. Pinocchio recognizes the donkey as Lampwick. Pinocchio mourns over Lampwick's dead
body and the farmer is perplexed as to why.

Pinocchio says that Lampwick was his friend and they went to school together, causing Farmer
John to be even more confused. After long months of working for the farmer and supporting
the ailing Geppetto he goes to town with what money he has saved (40 pennies to be exact) to
buy himself a new suit. He meets the snail, who tells him that the Blue-haired Fairy is ill and
needs money.

Pinocchio instantly gives the snail all the money he has, promising that he will help his mother
as much as he is helping his father. That night, he dreams he is visited by the Fairy, who kisses
him. When he wakes up, he is a real boy at last. Furthermore, Pinocchio finds that the Fairy left
him a new suit and boots, and a bag which Pinocchio thinks is the forty pennies he originally
loaned to the Blue Fairy. The boy is shocked to find instead forty freshly minted gold coins. He
is also reunited with Geppetto, now healthy and resuming woodcarving.

Show Adaptations

The place of the Talking Cricket is taken by Jiminy Cricket. This character is heavily influenced
by the character of the same name from the Disney film Pinocchio. He is not killed
by Pinocchio, and is tasked with looking afterGeppetto because he felt guilty after accidentally
killed and turn Geppetto's parents into puppet by the Marionette potion given
by Rumplestiltskin.

Pinocchio and Geppetto are chased by Monstro. They manage to jump overboard, with
Pinocchio making his father take the only life preserver. After the two are washed ashore,
the Blue Fairy turns Pinocchio into a real boy and he would remain a real boy as long as he
was brave, truthful and unselfish.

Geppetto was asked by the Blue Fairy to carve an enchanted wardrobe that can protect two
people from the Evil Queen's Dark Curse. However, because he worried that Pinocchio would
be turn into wood, Geppetto made a deal with the Blue Fairy: a place in the Wardrobe for its
creation. When Snow White went into labor early, he, ignored the Blue Fairy's request, sent
Pinocchio into the real world with the promise to protect Snow White's daughter - the Saviour.
However, they both were sent into a foster home and was constantly abused. Pinocchio,
unable to endure, ran away without Emma.

28 years later, Pinocchio - with the new alias of August Booth, returned to Storybrooke. It's
later revealed that because Emma's arrival in Storybrooke, his lifestyle has caught up to him,
turning him slowly into wood. In the first season finale he had been transformed completely.
However, it is later revealed that he is still alive. ("We Are Both")

Characters Featured

Pinocchio

Geppetto

The Talking Cricket

Fairy with the Turquoise Hair

The Terrible Dogfish

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