
Abanazar however follows Aladdin back to China, where it becomes apparent that in a contest of brains our hero hasn't a chance.

Under sentence of death from the emperor, Aladdin follows the palace to Morocco with the aid of the genie of the ring, and, obtaining the lamp, he gets the palace and the princess back to their wonted places. He is now the Genie's new master – and he quickly takes the palace (complete with the princess and her mother-in-law) to Morocco. The Widow Twankey is now the Royal Mother-in-law - and manages to dispose of that rusty old lamp to Abanazar (disguised as a pedlar). In no time at all Aladdin is a prince, and happily married to the princess of his dreams. The Widow Twankey starts to clean the rusty old lamp which is all her son has brought home - thus summoning another, much more powerful genie who makes it clear he will do anything for anyone unless they make unkind remarks about his green colouring. The upshot of this finds Aladdin trapped in the cave - where he inadvertently summons the genie of the ring - a sympathetic young lady who readily agrees to take him to his mother's house, after a few tears over the sad fact that "Genies have no mothers". He quickly convinces the widow and her son (neither of whom is very bright) that he is the boy's long lost uncle and that he will make Aladdin rich.
Everyone, including the emperor himself, has a pretty shrewd idea of what has happened – but, as he explains in song to his daughter, "Loves's a luxury" that royals must forgo for reasons of state.Ībanazar's arrival seems like just the thing. When he returns from his quest the Widow is relieved that he is alive, but very concerned that the young couple are in love. This is just the kind of challenge that Aladdin likes, so he rushes off to try to catch a glimpse of the Princess. The emperor's herald proclaims that anyone looking upon the Princess Badroulbadour as she passes on her way to the baths will be instantly executed. The ghostly chorus of the spirits takes us into the next scene, where Aladdin himself is discussing with his mother the virtues of idleness. He is somewhat bemused to discover that the source lies in a Chinese Laundry in Peking, and can be retrieved only by the launderess's ne'er-do-well son Aladdin. The wicked wizard Abanazar, in his desert home in Morocco, summons the spirits to tell him how he may obtain the magic lamp, the source of all power. In fact, the cast recording memorializes several rarely-recorded aspects of a traditional Aladdin pantomime, although the plot has fewer gratuitous twists, and the songs are more concerned with plot development than is usually the case in these productions. "Instead of writing a pantomime – a form of theatre about which I know very little – I decided to make Aladdin a musical, and based it on the original story in the Arabian nights." ĭespite this, the show closely follows the traditional pantomime story line, including the " pantomime dame" character of Widow Twankey, renamed Tuang Kee Chung.

Sandy Wilson was apparently asked to write a conventional pantomime in this tradition, but he demurred. The Aladdin story (sometimes combined with Ali Baba and other Arabian Nights tales) has been a traditional pantomime subject in England for nearly two hundred years, and numerous versions of this tale have been presented.
