- Cinderfella: [Fella reading from the engraving on a ring] To Fella: Love thy neighbor. Love him hard and well. The love that you give will be returned and manifested in itself, to give back the warmth and the care and the affection, as well as the hugs and the loves of those who have loved. To live and not to love could be affectionate, but yet warmth would still maintain itself in the love that you give to them. Oh, others have loved in the past and yet have found that they couldn't be hate. So with love it is the beneficial part of giving. Many children in the past have loved and yet found that they couldn't possibly know anyone with kissing and wisdom with hugging...
- Cinderfella: Hey, isn't he holding the future wife just a little too close?
- Fairy Godfather: Oh, ho-ho! Stop worrying. She's all yours, every bit of her.
- Cinderfella: Yeah, but I'd like to have the bits he's holding!
- Fairy Godfather: [Fella has fainted] Jack and Jill! Fetch a pail of water!
- [Jack and Jill magically appear and dump water on Fella]
- [first lines]
- Lawyer: ...and being of sound mind, and in full possession of my faculties, and in the presence of the undersigned witnesses, I write my last will and testament. I leave my estate and all my worldly goods to my dear wife, Emily. In the knowledge that she will take loving care of my son, Fella.
- Fairy Godfather: Fella, you have been chosen to rectify all the great wrongs brought about by the original Cinderella story. Through the centuries, the women of the world influenced by the Cinderella story have waited. Waited for their Prince Charming's to come galloping out of the wild blue yonders on their white horses to claim their hands in marriage.
- Cinderfella: Yeah, I read that once...
- Fairy Godfather: But there was only one Prince Charming! And, when he didn't appear, these women married the closest available man. And they were forever after after miserable, because they always regretted and they felt that, well, they had taken second-best. But what is worse, they made their poor husbands miserable because the poor fellow wasn't a prince.
- Cinderfella: Tsk, tsk, tsk...
- Fairy Godfather: Oh, the Cinderella legend has brought nothing but dissatisfaction to the hearts of women. And their husbands have taken the brunt of it.
- Cinderfella: It's not fair.
- Fairy Godfather: I won't bother you with actual statistics, Fella, but the unhappy husbands of the world are crying for help! They're crying for a chance to get even. It's time, for a change! And you have been chosen to bring out that change.
- Cinderfella: Change... I'm... chosen... I'm... who... chosen...?
- Cinderfella: He wasn't tall, he wasn't handsome, he wasn't even clever. And yet, he ended up marrying a beautiful princess... THAT'LL teach those nagging wives, won't it, Father Fairy... God... sir?
- Maximilian: [whispering to Rupert] Has he come out of it yet?
- Rupert: [whispering back to Maximilian] Come out? He can hardly drag himself in.
- Fairy Godfather: If you can no longer believe in your Fairy Godfather, maybe it'll be easier to believe in your Fairy Godmother... I'm up on all this Oedipus nonsense, ya know!