25 Jan 2012
by Ron Hatfield, founder
So where does the desire to be beautiful and the center of attention clash with just ordinary make believe?
The recent book by Peggy Orenstein “Cinderella ate my daughter” contends that the Princess movement is ‘over kill’. Her charges include the notion that it causes girls to be materialistic and ego centric, i.e. ‘Diva like’. I believe that Ms. Orenstein has hit a nerve but only sees the glass half empty.
No doubt that every sport, interest, politic and trend has its extremists. There are Christian churches who celebrate killings and athletes who push themselves OVER the edge and are debilitated for life or die from their risk taking. There are little girls who believe that beauty, a daring prince and the attention it gets is the ultimate goal in life.
But let’s step back and take a look at another perspective of using the fun and allure of being dressed as a beautiful princess to shape that little personality a different way.
Recently at our “Pink Carpet Event” at the Winterland Princess Festival we featured several little girls dressed in Princess Ilissa, Mila, Sonrisa, and Maurine dress-ups who were reporting to the audience what they did to be MORE THAN A PRINCESS. Each stood and explained in as few words as she could meekly muster, before the press and such a large crowd, that she ‘helped to pick up trash in her neighborhood’, or ‘helped collect books to be shipped to Africa’, ‘helped her mom do the dishes’, and other acts of self initiative to serve others.
Every time that I see these young girls I still call them with the name of the Princess they represented that day. I faithfully comment about how much they were like the Princess Festival princess they represented. ( Ilissa offering to help flood victims, Mila comforting children after an earthquake, Maurine is a peacemaker, and Sonrisa becoming a detective to help solve the case of her sick little sister.) The reinforcement was on the deeds of these noble young princess figures, coupled with the fun of their dress-ups and the opportunity to “get into character” with their family and/or friends.
And when you think about it, almost every little-girl-to-grandmother has a strong desire to feed homeless people, beautify a park, comfort the sick and disadvantaged, and help save starving children in Africa. Whenever I am in conversation with a beautiful young college person and the topic turns to our work building dams and feeding orphans in Kenya, they volunteer fearlessly to come and assist. Is this not a very worthwhile trait in the “beauty” category that EVERY girl can truly possess and act upon?
Princess Festival is also careful to not dwell on stereotypical antagonists. The challenge is not “someone” that needs to be defeated but instead focuses on the human misfortune that must be addressed. Thus we find the next very unique aspect of the Princess Festival approach in the development of little girls…. A “True Princess”, meaning every girl, can make a difference whether it is in her home, her kingdom or the world. As a fan of Princess Festival princesses she learns by example and training to become a force for good and an agent of change.
Our precious daughters and grand-daughters deserve better than to be considered as “half empty” Diva’s during this enormously important period of their development. Let them be beautiful in their dress-ups and change-makers in their hearts. (I have 6 daughters and 32 grand-daughters… lots of firsthand experience!)


With a foot attached to my leg
There was only one spot left.





