Someone who was not invited goes as the Jabberwocky a (fierce creature from the book) and brings mayhem to the girls' night as he starts murdering them one by one while the party is taking place.
When the Jabberwocky steals Betty away, everyone comes to her rescue.
Before he died, this voice was captured in a recording was made of him reading “Jabberwocky” from Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There (1872), a book both dear and inspirational to him.
Cheshire Cat, Jabberwock, Dormouse
The generic name is derived from the fantasy creatures known as 'borogoves' in the Lewis Carroll poem Jabberwocky, part of his Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
The school's newspaper, the Jabberwocky, takes its name from Lewis Carroll's poem of the same name from "Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There".
In addition to the main restriction, the author attempts to mimic portions, or entire works, of different types and pieces of literature (The Raven, Jabberwocky, the lyrics of Yes, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, Rubaiyat, Hamlet, and Carl Sandburg's Grass) in story, structure, and rhyme.
Jabberwocky sentences take their name from the language of Lewis Carroll's well-known poem "Jabberwocky".
Two of his best-known roles were in Time Bandits, where he played Benson, a mentally disturbed follower to Evil, and in Jabberwocky, where he played a footless man known as Wat Dabney.
Appleseed comes across as a peyote-powered academic experiment, a fusion of William S. Burroughs' Naked Lunch and Lewis Carroll's Jabberwocky...
It is in the same style of their previous albums, continuing their rich use of samples as diverse as Raymond Baxter ("That's the picture. You s-you see it for yourself."), W. H. Auden ("This great society is going smash / A culture is no better than its woods", from his poem "Bucolics: II, Woods"), and a reading of Lewis Carroll's poem "Jabberwocky".
His four other work include a collection of short stories, two political thrillers, and the cult novelization of Terry Gilliam's Jabberwocky.
The tale is said by many to be the inspiration for Lewis Carroll's poem Jabberwocky which he wrote while in Croft on Tees and Whitburn.