Winx Club Forever
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The Kensington Park is a recreational area located in London, England, Earth. It appears in Season 2, World of Winx.
Overview[]
The park is mostly covered in grass and shrubs but with plenty of tall trees, there is also a nearby stream. A statue of Peter Pan was enacted in the park.
World of Winx[]
The park is mentioned by Wendy Darling who told the person on the phone that she will take the orphaned children to it, which she does. When she and the children arrive, she heads over to the statue of Peter Pan, gazing longingly at it. Meanwhile, the children are having fun when multiple shadow bunnies manifest. The children, young and naive, do not notice the shadows' menace and are follow the bunnies as they run off.
The shadow bunnies lead the children to the bridge. Wendy then notices the silence and frantically call out to them. But with no reply, she runs to find them. Tinkerbell, who is watching, summons more shadows to strike fear into the children. When Wendy finds the children, she runs towards them and try to protect them from the shadows. The shadows then start crushing the stone bridge and it begins to give way.
The Winx arrive in time however. Stella chases the shadows away with light, Flora and Aisha stabilize the collapsing bridge. Wendy and the children are saved. As Tecna, Musa, Flora, and Aisha check up on them, a shadow sneaks up behind Bloom and steals a part of her essence. Before she could even react, the shadow is gone. However, what just happened is not important. Bloom approaches Wendy and calls her by her name. A surprised Wendy asks who the Winx are and Bloom explains they are simply trying to protect people's dreams, and they need her help.
Trivia[]
- This is a real life park located in London, England but is called Kensington Garden. It is a royal park and was created for the royal family.[1] It is the setting for the Kensington Palace where Queen Victoria was born and resided there until becoming queen in 1837.[2]
- The statue of Peter Pan in World of Winx is exactly the same as the one found in this garden. It is however, tan rather than a dark metallic look.
Gallery[]
References[]
- ↑ Thurston, Hazel. Royal Parks for the People: London's Ten. UK and USA: David and Charles. Vancouver: Douglas, David and Charles. 1974. ISBN 0-7153-6454-5. Includes listing of the Parks with black-and-white photographic plates.
- ↑ https://www.royalparks.org.uk/parks/kensington-gardens/about-kensington-gardens