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[[WMG: "The Place Where The Lost Things Go" is a song Mary sings to herself to cope with the loneliness associated with her line of work.]]
Remember when Mary felt sentimental when her job was done with the Bankses in the first film? She tried to feign being detached to the children but the Parrot sensed otherwise, knowing all along that Mary had grown fond of Jane and Michael, only for her to leave as she has fulfilled her purpose with them. It would make sense for Mary to sing this to herself as a way for her to cope with missing the children she met and grown attached to over the years.
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Critical Research Failure is a disambiguation page


* [[{{CriticalResearchFailure}} You do realize that Diagon Alley is]] ''[[{{CriticalResearchFailure}} in London itself]]'', right?

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* [[{{CriticalResearchFailure}} You do realize that Diagon Alley is]] ''[[{{CriticalResearchFailure}} in is ''in London itself]]'', itself'', right?
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* Unlikely considering Ms. Price was younger in 1940, this lady is in her 90s in the 1930s. Unless she time-travelled (TimeTravel wasn't in the book of spells owned by Emilius Brown, that being said).

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* Unlikely considering Ms. Price was younger in 1940, this lady is in her 90s in the 1930s. Unless she time-travelled (TimeTravel wasn't in the book of spells owned by Emilius Emelius Brown, that being said).
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Ms. Price was an accomplised wizard by herself at the end of Bedknobs and Broomsticks, and knew about magic and imagination. Who else could be Mary's accomplice, but her?

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Ms. Price was an accomplised wizard by herself at the end of Bedknobs and Broomsticks, and knew about magic and imagination. Who else could be Mary's accomplice, but her?her?
* Unlikely considering Ms. Price was younger in 1940, this lady is in her 90s in the 1930s. Unless she time-travelled (TimeTravel wasn't in the book of spells owned by Emilius Brown, that being said).
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Going along with the idea that Mary Poppins and Peter Pan exist in the same universe, remember a certain fairy being quite fond of... lost things? That's right - the place Mary Poppins sings about might just be the same place where Tinker Bell finds her 'lost things'. As for the Banks children's mother - she is also there, transformed into some sort of magical creature in what would be her afterlife. And the 'star that she makes glow'? The second star to the right!

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Going along with the idea that Mary Poppins and Peter Pan exist in the same universe, remember a certain fairy being quite fond of... lost things? That's right - the place Mary Poppins sings about might just be the same place where Tinker Bell finds her 'lost things'. As for the Banks children's mother - she is also there, transformed into some sort of magical creature in what would be her afterlife. And the 'star that she makes glow'? The second star to the right!right!

[[WMG: Balloon Lady is Eglantine Price]]
Ms. Price was an accomplised wizard by herself at the end of Bedknobs and Broomsticks, and knew about magic and imagination. Who else could be Mary's accomplice, but her?
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It's right there in the song: a leerie's got the gift of second sight. Mary Poppins is, of course, a Name, similar to Teresa / the Baldomeran.

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It's right there in the song: a leerie's got the gift of second sight. Mary Poppins is, of course, a Name, similar to Teresa / the Baldomeran.Baldomeran.

[[WMG: The Place Where the Lost Things Go is Pixie Hollow]]
Going along with the idea that Mary Poppins and Peter Pan exist in the same universe, remember a certain fairy being quite fond of... lost things? That's right - the place Mary Poppins sings about might just be the same place where Tinker Bell finds her 'lost things'. As for the Banks children's mother - she is also there, transformed into some sort of magical creature in what would be her afterlife. And the 'star that she makes glow'? The second star to the right!
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Added "Jack has the Lantern aspect" WMG.


During "Can You Imagine That?" Mary Poppins references an island of pirates that never grow old. This sounds like a reference to Peter Pan. The idea is further supported by the WMG about Peter messing up Big Ben.

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During "Can You Imagine That?" Mary Poppins references an island of pirates that never grow old. This sounds like a reference to Peter Pan. The idea is further supported by the WMG about Peter messing up Big Ben.Ben.

[[WMG: Jack and the lamplighters still remember Mary Poppins because of their [[VideoGame/CultistSimulator affinity for the principle of Lantern]].]]
It's right there in the song: a leerie's got the gift of second sight. Mary Poppins is, of course, a Name, similar to Teresa / the Baldomeran.
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*This is a fun theory, but Peter Pan is actually set earlier than the first movie (most likely between 1900 and 1906).

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