The Snow Queen (Episode)

"Hook: Swan, what did that monster do to the sheriff's station? Emma Swan: The monster who did this was not the Snow Queen. It was me."

"The Snow Queen" is the seventh episode of Season Four of ABC's Once Upon a Time. It was written by Edward Kitsis & Adam Horowitz, and directed by Billy Gierhart. It is the seventy-third episode of the series overall, and premiered on November 9, 2014.

Synopsis
Emma captures the Snow Queen and interrogates her at the sheriff’s station. But the Snow Queen uses her prior knowledge of Emma to try to persuade her into thinking that they are more alike than she could possibly imagine. Regina and Robin Hood’s relationship grows increasingly complex as they struggle to find a way to save his dying wife, Emma begins to see what she missed out on by not growing up and being a family with Snow and Charming when she sees how involved Mary Margaret is in baby Neal’s life, and Henry begins his after school job in Gold’s shop while trying to help Regina find a clue to the identity of the author of the storybook. Meanwhile, in Arendelle of the past, we learn about the origin of the Snow Queen and her familial connection to Elsa and Anna as we see her discover her spectacular yet deadly ice powers.

Starring

 * Ginnifer Goodwin as Mary Margaret Blanchard
 * Jennifer Morrison as Emma Swan
 * Lana Parrilla as Regina Mills
 * Josh Dallas as David Nolan
 * Emilie de Ravin as Belle French
 * Colin O'Donoghue as Hook
 * Jared S. Gilmore as Henry Mills
 * Michael Socha as Will Scarlet
 * Robert Carlyle as Rumplestiltskin/Mr. Gold

Guest Starring

 * Sarah Bolger as Aurora
 * Georgina Haig as Elsa
 * Sean Maguire as Robin Hood
 * Elizabeth Mitchell as Snow Queen
 * Sally Pressman as Helga
 * Jessy Schram as Ashley Boyd
 * Pascale Hutton as Gerda
 * John Rhys-Davies as Grand Pabbie (Voice)
 * Jonathan Runyon as Duke
 * Brighton Sharbino as young Ingrid

Co-Starring

 * Ryan Booth as Man
 * Bailey Herbert as young Helga
 * Ava Marie Telek as young Gerda
 * Greg Webb as King

Uncredited

 * Unknown baby as Alexandra
 * Unknown baby as Prince Neal
 * Unknown baby as Philip
 * Unknown as Floyd

Trivia
Production Notes=

Production Notes

 * The title card features the Arendelle princesses' kite.
 * After shooting the scenes with Emma and Ingrid at the sheriff's station, Jennifer Morrison had to use ice on her hand after slamming the table over and over.


 * -|Episode Connections=

Event Chronology

 * The Arendelle events take place many years before "A Tale of Two Sisters".
 * The Enchanted Forest events take place after Geppetto's parents are turned into marionettes in "That Still Small Voice" (the marionettes can be seen in Rumplestiltskin's castle), and many years before Anna visits the Enchanted Forest in "White Out".
 * The Storybrooke events take place after "Family Business" and before "Smash the Mirror".

Episode Connections

 * Robin Hood stops Will Scarlet from leaving Granny's by throwing a dart at the door to get his attention in the same way Graham did to Emma in "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter".
 * The handcuffs used to neutralize Ingrid's Ice Magic have the same design as the handcuffs used to neutralize Regina's powers in "Heart of Gold".
 * The gloves given to Ingrid by Rumplestiltskin, is the same pair of gloves worn by Elsa in "There's No Place Like Home", "A Tale of Two Sisters" and "Smash the Mirror".
 * Emma learns how to control her magic in "Smash the Mirror".
 * What the Snow Queen whispered to Mr. Gold is revealed in "Smash the Mirror".


 * -|Cultural References=

Disney

 * This episode features Elsa, the queen and the Duke of Weselton from Frozen as well as their homeland Arendelle.
 * The Duke's dances in a similar manner as in the Frozen movie.

Fairytales and Folklore

 * This episode is a rendition of "The Snow Queen" fairytale, focusing on the Snow Queen and Gerda. Also featured is Rumplestiltskin from the fairytale of the same name, Aurora from the fairytale "Sleeping Beauty" and Captain Hook from the "Peter Pan" story.
 * According to Emma, the language which Belle translated for her is Elvish, a fictional language invented by J. R. R. Tolkien, author of The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings.
 * Ashley says to Emma that if she can't get Neal to sleep, she can just tell him he's going to turn into a pumpkin by midnight; a reference to the Cinderella fairytale.

Lost

 * Robin Hood's darts hit the wall near the numbers 8 and 15, two of the Lost numbers.

Popular Culture

 * Emma remarks that she hasn't seen The Lord of the Rings movies.
 * This famous trilogy features Once Upon a Time actors John Rhys-Davies as Gimli and Brad Dourif as Gríma Wormtongue.


 * -|Props Notes=

Props Notes

 * At the sheriff's station, when Emma gives Elsa the spell book, you can, for a brief second, see two papers on the desk. One of them contains a set of handwritten notes, and is dated August 19. 1994. The other is transcript of an interview with a man called Cyril Keep, a former math teacher who lives in a homeless shelter, accused of abducting a boy who was playing in a park. According to himself, he has a problem with "something in himself" when he sleeps, "a dream".
 * The language in the spell book that Emma and Elsa are reading is not actually Elvish. It contains an excerpt from The Book of Lost Tales by J. R. R. Tolkien, written in Anglo-Saxon Futhorc Runes. The excerpt is from the chapter about "The Tale of Tinúviel". The text transliterates as:

Then was there much eagerness alight and Eriol told them of his first wanderings about the western havens, of the comrades he made and the ports he knew, of how he was one time wrecked upon far western islands and there upon a lonely eyot found an an [sic] ancient mariner who dwelt for ever solitary in a cabin on the shore that he had fash ioned [sic] of the timbers of his boat. More wise was he, said Eriol, in all matters of the sea than any other i have met, and much of wizardry was there in his lore. Strange things he told me, of regions far beyond the western sea, of the magic isles, and that most lonely

one that lies beyond. Once long ago he said he had sighted it glimmering afar off, and after had he sought it many a day in vain.


 * Much of the text is repeated on both pages.


 * Excerpts from the fairy tale of "The Golden Bird" and the Charles Perrault version of "Cinderella" can be seen when Regina flips through the storybook.
 * One of the illustrations is "The Meeting of Oberon and Titiania", a 1905 artwork by the famous English book illustrator Arthur Rackham, depicting a scene from William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
 * An illustration of Snow White and Prince Charming kissing, is accompanied by a scene from "Pilot":

P rince Charming [illegible word] the Evil Queen's Dark Knights, fighting his way towards the wardrobe Gepetto [sic] had fashioned, the one that would carry Emma to safety. In one hand, the Prince held his sword, slicing [illegible adjective] at his enemies, while in the other he held his newborn baby girl, clinging to her for dear life. Having vanquished the knights, Charming opened the door to the magical dresser. Tears in his eyes, the Prince placed Emma inside the small opening. "Find us," he said, and kissed her on the forehead. Charming closed the door to the dresser, knowing that this would be the last time he would see his beloved baby for twenty-eight years. But deep down, the Prince knew that this was the only way. He had to let Emma go in order to save her. He also knew that one day, Emma would return to save them all. As Charming closed up the dresser, he was [illegible word] ambushed by two unforseen Dark Knights. The Prince tried to fight them off, but they proved too formidable for him. One of the knights pierced Charming's stomach with his sword, and the Prince fell to the ground, [illegible word] death. The knights checked inside the wardrobe, only to [image ends] [three illegible words] [image ends] happily ever after. The end!


 * An illustration of Maid Marian and Robin Hood, is accompanied by a story about how they met:

R obin was back on [image ends] [illegible word]. He and the [image ends] [illegible word] the [illegible word] [image ends] the forest. [illegible word] [image ends] was quick. Rather [image ends] [illegible word] well, as [image ends] [three illegible words] [image ends] the figure, [illegible word] [image ends] to the ground, the figure's [two illegible words] [image ends] the most beautiful woman that Robin had ever [image ends] The woman told Robin Hood that [image ends] Marian. Her parents were so poor [image ends] the evil Sheriff's taxes. Instead, [image ends] they had of any value − her hand in [image ends] begged Robin Hood. If her carriage [image ends] Sheriff's castle by daybreak, her p[image ends] the forfeit. [image ends] "I shall ransom you, said Ro[image ends] "Then the stories are true." [image ends] say there is a thief in Nottingh[image ends] Sheriff himself. Our people [image ends] Sheriff takes from one pocket [image ends] Men steal from the other. [image ends] Robin Hood had never [image ends] manner before, and for the [image ends]


 * An artwork by the French engraver Bernard Picart, Pygmalion is Enamored with a Statue He Had Made (1733), can be seen in Regina's study.
 * The painting in the hallway outside, is The Return of Persephone (1891) by the English painter and sculptor Frederic Leighton. The artwork depicts Hermes helping Persephone to return to her mother Demeter after Zeus forced Hades to return Persepone.
 * The label on Mr. Gold's furniture polish says Black Cat.
 * The gazebo where Ingrid meets the Duke is a redressed version of the prop/set used for the gazebo where Cora finds Jonathan in "Bleeding Through", and Bo Peep's gazebo in "White Out". Most noticeably, a new roof was added for the episode.

Costume Notes

 * Henry's tie is the same one that Mr. Gold was wearing in the forest in "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter" and at the sheriff's station in "Desperate Souls".


 * -|Goofs=

Goofs

 * The baby playing Alexandra Herman is the wrong age and gender.