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When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

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Some might say science fiction or fantasy is inaccessible because the settings are unrealistic or the characters exhibit extraordinary or magical abilities. And yet, alternate realities in which people, creatures, and sometimes inanimate objects break into song are totally mainstream. Musicals like West Side Story or The Sound of Music might not qualify as fantasy just for existing in these singing-heavy dimensions, but what about when there’s overt magic involved too?

The film version of Mary Poppins is lousy with magical singing, by which I mean singing that is actually magic-inducing. She’s casting spells in a bizarro dimension using only the power of her perfectly on-key voice. No, really.

Musicals with overt-fantasy elements in them aren’t super uncommon, but they are slightly out-numbered by the more conventional kind. For every Brigadoon and its time-traveling Scottish town, there’s Annie, Les Misérables, and Oliver! No matter how crazy and off the wall shit gets in Oliver!—I mean, hungry orphan children probably can’t do choreographed dance numbers in our universe—there isn’t any actual magic. In the film version of Mary Poppins, our practically perfect nanny posesses a Doctor Who­-meets-Harry Potter style of magic. She can pull infinite amounts of objects from her awesome bag, her friends can levitate, and she causes animals to speak and sing. She can fly. But what makes the magic in Mary Poppins so interesting is that the songs themselves all sort of create specific magical events—you could even call them spells.

Now, this isn’t a metaphor. I’m being totally serious. In a ton of fantasy from Tolkien to Rowling to Grossman, you usually have to speak a series of words to make the spell do its thing. In Mary Poppins, these spells are sung. From “Step-In-Time” to “Jolly Holiday,” to “I Love to Laugh,” to the most magical song of all, “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious,” each song seems to create a certain magical effect. Perhaps the best example is “A Spoonful of Sugar,” which we’re told “makes the medicine go down.” But what really happens when this song is sung? Well, the messes and tasks which normally would take a long time to get done are finished in a more timely fashion thanks to Mary Poppins manipulating time and space, levitating objects, and performing some mild mind control of a little bird. So “A Spoonful of Sugar” is Mary’s ‘clean up the house’ spell. It seems clear that “I Love to Laugh” is Burt and Mary’s ‘uncontrollable levitation spell,’ and “Chim-Chim Cheree” is a spell which allows people (in this case, specifically chimney sweeps) to change the size and shape of their bodies.

Mary Poppins

And “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious”? I’m betting that’s a catch-all spell designed to deflect non-magical users from learning more about the secret magical powers someone like Mary Poppins or Burt might possess. True, in the film, “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious” is this big revelry with fun times being had for all, but there’s a sense that it’s being done for the public; after all, Mary sings this song after winning a race and getting a bunch of (perhaps) unwanted attention. “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious,” is a spell for hiding your dark, powerful magical abilities by being really fun in the moment. It’s a spell that says “look at me! Look at me! YOU HAVE NO IDEA WHAT YOU’RE LOOKING AT.” Like all good magical creatures, Mary Poppins is a control-freak, and super keen on keeping some of her power a secret.

You might think this songs-as-spells thing in Mary Poppins gets a little tenuous when you consider that a non-magical character like Winifred Banks sings. Or what about “Let’s Go Fly a Kite?” no magic involved there, right? Kites run on science!, you say. Well, Winifred’s non-magical “Sister Suffragette” just proves that the film is living in the conventional alternate reality where most musicals reside anyway. As with most songs in non-magical musicals, Winifred’s singing doesn’t cause events to happen, but rather conveys information. In West Side Story Tony just met a girl named Maria, and tells us so. In Les Misérables, Jean Valjean wants God or whoever to “bring [Marius] home,” but that doesn’t actually make it happen; instead Jean Valjean saves Marius himself. And “Tomorrow” doesn’t grant Annie the ability to speed up or slow down time. She’s just a regular person having a fairly simple and somewhat childish observation on the passage of time.

Mary Poppins

Mary Poppins, though, would never waste her time singing something that wasn’t a magical spell because she’s not a half-assed philosopher like Annie. Instead, Mary’s a full-on magical being of the highest order and if she lived in the same dimension of Hogwarts or Brakebills, I’m sure she would be drafted instantly to teach all sorts of badass classes. So, today on the 50th Anniversary of one of the best movies of all time, just remember this one thing: if you could sing like Julie Andrews, you could probably make magical things happen around you, too.


Ryan Britt is a longtime contributor to Tor.com.

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