![]() ![]() Additionally, her subsequent screen time in “Ralph Breaks the Internet” is shorter than that of any other princess who appears in that film. Aladdin appears on screen for twice as long as she does, while the villainous Jafar outpaces her by 31 seconds. Jasmine is the second and most recent princess to not have the most screen time in her respective film. Voiced by Linda Larkin (singing: Lea Salonga) Jasmine (‘Aladdin’) – 19 minutes and 57 seconds ![]() This is due to the fact that she spends the first fifth of the film as a mostly unseen baby and is asleep for nearly all of its final third. Aurora (‘Sleeping Beauty’) – 17 minutes and 52 secondsĪurora is the fourth most prominent character in “Sleeping Beauty,” behind all three of her fairy guardians (Flora, Fauna, and Merryweather). A few other Disney feature characters, such as Anna and Elsa (“Frozen”) and Eilonwy (“The Black Cauldron”), are technically princesses, but have never been inducted into the official group. The screen times used for this ranking derive from those films alone, with all direct-to-video continuation films and other non-canonical specials being discounted. These princesses are counted based on their appearances within Disney Animation Studios’ 60-film canon, with Pixar character Merida being the only exception. With Tinker Bell and Esmeralda having been removed, the group now includes Tiana (“The Princess and the Frog”), Rapunzel (“Tangled”), Merida (“Brave”), Moana (“Moana”), and Raya (“Raya and the Last Dragon”). When the marketing brand was introduced in the early 2000s, Snow White was joined by nine others: Cinderella (“Cinderella”), Tinker Bell (“Peter Pan”), Aurora (“Sleeping Beauty”), Ariel (“The Little Mermaid”), Belle (“Beauty and the Beast”), Jasmine (“Aladdin”), Pocahontas (“Pocahontas”), Esmeralda (“The Hunchback of Notre Dame”), and Mulan (“Mulan”). Scroll through our photo gallery to find out how the rankings of the Disney Princesses by screen time.Ī total of 13 characters are currently included in the Disney Princess lineup. Among the studio’s official princesses, she held the high-end screen time record for over five decades, and now sits in 10th place. ![]() By appearing in 1937’s “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” for 29 minutes and 19 seconds, Princess Snow White set a screen time record among all female Disney animated characters that stood until Alice of “Alice in Wonderland” surpassed her 14 years later. ![]()
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