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Pinocchio Tickets
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For Pinocchio Refund Policy Schedule or Pinocchio Refund Policy tickets availability click above link
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All Pinocchio sales are final. No refunds or exchanges
will be honored. Be sure to order only what you need. Upgrades are available
for a premium.
In the event that a Pinocchio event cancels a refund will be given.
If a new date is scheduled there will be no refunds. Usually the event will
reschedule and your tickets will be good for the new date. If an event
cancels 30 days will be given before refunds begin to see if a new date is
announced. If no new Pinocchio event is rescheduled a full refund
at this point is given.
If you have any questions about a refund feel free to call 281-447-1579. If
for some reason you can not make the new date, Northsidetickets.com will
offer to resell your tickets. Northsidetickets does not accept
responsability of paying for these tickets until they have resold.
Northsidetickets offers this service to help keep our customers happy.
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The Adventures of Pinocchio (Le Avventure di Pinocchio) is a novel for children by Italian author Carlo Collodi. The first half was published in serial form between 1881 and 1883, and then completed as a book for children in February 1883. It is about the mischievous adventures of Pinocchio, an animated marionette, and his poor father, a woodcarver named Geppetto. It is considered a classic of children's literature and has spawned many derivative works of art, such as Disney's classic 1940 animated movie of the same name, and commonplace ideas, such as a liar's long nose.//The Adventures of Pinocchio is a story about an animated puppet, talking crickets, boys that turn into mules and other assorted fairy tale-like devices that would be familiar to a reader of Alice in Wonderland or Brothers Grimm—in fact earlier in his career Collodi worked on a translation of Mother Goose. However Pinocchio is not a traditional fairy-tale world, containing as it does the hard realities of the need for food, shelter and other basic measures of daily life, even the setting of the story is the very real Tuscan area of Italy. It was a unique literary melding of genres for its time.Pinocchio draws from classical sources, such as Homer and Dante, but more significantly is a part of the Tuscan novella or short-story tradition which found its genesis in Boccaccio's Decameron (1353) — as Glauco Cambon wrote:Collodi had not originally intended the work as children's literature; the ending was unhappy and allegorically dealt with serious themes. In the original serialized version, Pinocchio seemingly dies a gruesome death, hanged for his innumerable faults at the end of chapter 15. At the request of his editor, Collodi added chapters 16–36, in which the Blue Fairy rescues Pinocchio and eventually turns him into a real boy when he acquires a deeper understanding of himself, making it more suitable for children. The Blue Fairy, a female motherly figure, plays the dominant role in the second half of the book, versus the fatherly figure of Geppetto in the first part
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