Fairy Godmother
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Fairy Godmother
Summary
Fairy Godmother is a fairy in a work of fiction[1]. She has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- A child of Fairy Godmother was Prince Charming[3].
- Fairy Godmother is the creator of Ted Elliott[4].
- Fairy Godmother is recorded as female[5].
- Fairy Godmother's instance of is recorded as fairy in a work of fiction[6].
- Fairy Godmother's instance of is recorded as animated film character[7].
- Fairy Godmother's instance of is recorded as Shrek character[8].
- Fairy Godmother's instance of is recorded as fairy godmother[9].
- Fairy Godmother was performed by Jennifer Saunders[10].
- Among the performers on Fairy Godmother was Claudia Christian[11].
- Fairy Godmother's Commons category is recorded as Fairy Godmother (Shrek)[12].
- Fairy Godmother was published on May 2004[13].
- Fairy Godmother's from narrative universe is recorded as Shrek universe[14].
- Fairy Godmother's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as English[15].
- Fairy Godmother's present in work is recorded as Shrek 2[16].
- Fairy Godmother's present in work is recorded as Shrek 2: Team Action[17].
- Fairy Godmother's present in work is recorded as Shrek 2[18].
- Fairy Godmother's present in work is recorded as Shrek Forever After[19].
- Fairy Godmother's present in work is recorded as Shrek the Third[20].
- Fairy Godmother's last words is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': "I told you: Ogres don't live HAPPILY EVER AFTER!!"}[21].
- Fairy Godmother's first appearance is recorded as Shrek 2[22].
- Fairy Godmother's narrative role is recorded as main antagonist[23].
- Fairy Godmother's enemy is recorded as Shrek[24].
- Fairy Godmother's enemy is recorded as Princess Fiona[25].
- Fairy Godmother's enemy is recorded as Donkey[26].
- Fairy Godmother's enemy is recorded as Puss in Boots[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Fairy Godmother is the creator of Ted Elliott[4].
Personal Life
A child of Fairy Godmother was Prince Charming[3].
Why It Matters
Fairy Godmother has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]