#Cassandra cats
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mrnuggets07 · 22 days ago
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Mistoffelees and Cassandra judge you
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awliette · 9 months ago
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Pile o’ Jellicles
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Bonus:
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eye-may · 4 days ago
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jellicle cats have MOONlit EYES 🌕👄🌕
GIVE IT UP FOR JELLICLE JANUARY DAY 5 - CASSANDRA!
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pinkieclown · 7 months ago
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jellicle posts: the threequel!!
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part 1 :) part 2 :3
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cillyscribbles · 2 months ago
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initially started a ficlet, drew this to accompany it, then took 3 months to finish said ficlet. joys upon joys! ☺️
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When the little ones suggested she get the best of her old dancing wardrobe and throw together the costume of a fortune teller, Cassandra had initially thought it’d be a fun spin on her usual Halloween get-up – which was, admittedly, not much more than buying a sack’s worth of candy and putting on a witch hat whenever the doorbell was rung.
In spite of feeling a little breezy in the cold October evening and swiftly abandoned by her gaggle of sworn companions, she turned out to be quite popular among the neighborhood kids. Few could – or would – resist the show she made of looking mysteriously about an old, overturned glass bowl. She was slow and deliberate in her choice of candy to present to them, and did so with an air of utmost importance, delighting in the way they would accept it as carefully as one might a glass dish.
As the sky darkened and the evening went on, the littler ones began to be drawn back inside, and she had less and less cause for her playful routine. Still, for a while, she remained, exchanging candy with some and thanking others for their compliments of her costume. Finally, once she’d received a couple comments about being too old for this from a few of those sorts of people, she figured she’d fish the last of the candy out of her bag at last and go back inside; evidently, the folks who thought they were too good for playing a little dress-up were beginning their portion of the night.
Just as she tied her bag closed, though, she lifted her head – and just there, on the edge of the pavement as though they’d risen right out of the asphalt in the street, stood two – grown adults, from what she could tell, and watched her point-blank. And as soon as she locked eyes with one of the figures, they smiled identically uneven smiles and made their way to her bench, as though her acknowledgement had been all they’d been waiting for.
As they stepped under the light of the streetlamps, Cassandra found their smiles weren’t the only thing identical about them; in fact, she found it hard to differentiate between the two at all, with only perhaps half an inch of difference in height. They were dark cats, though spotted, with their fur clipped short and rounded at points. Entirely orderly, and, as far as she could see, woefully underdressed for the occasion.
It did not impede the apparent enthusiasm she could read out in their faces. They seemed, for a reason she couldn’t be certain of, delighted.
“Do you seek the future or fortune?” A quiet, fairly low voice came from them – one of them, Cassandra realized, was a queen, and so it took her a further moment to register that she was asking a question.
She cleared her throat – and, half-to prompt them again, asked – “Beg pardon?”
“When you look into the glass, do you watch for the broad strokes of a future?” the queen asked again, and the one next to her imitated the snapping beak of a bird with two fingers.
“Or do you pick at the thread of only a single person’s path?” He was a tom, if she was to go by the voice, but both of them were a proper enigma.
She cleared her throat again – it stung, this time – and fidgeted with the bowl and the bag, trying discreetly to get a better look at them without meeting their still-peering eyes.
“Oh, I’m not sure which way I’m supposed to do it,” she admitted – they seemed odd enough for her to wonder. It would’ve been just her luck to meet a pair of genuine fortune tellers the one day in her life she was out masquerading as one. Sheepishly, she explained – “This is just a costume, I don’t really...”
“There is no wrong way to do it,” the queen interrupted, and glanced with some restrained excitement from Cassandra to the tom, whom Cassandra thought would’ve been strange to assume was anyone other than her brother.
“No such thing as a wrong way,” he seconded – and they sounded alike, too, in an uncanny, complimentary harmony.
Cassandra raised her eyebrows and looked down at the bowl she held on her legs. The bowl, which was indeed only that, did not offer any crystal ball-worthy advice for the situation. She wondered what was behind the question; what was the difference – what did it even mean?
“I suppose I’d focus,” she guessed, carefully, and looked up at them. “Wouldn’t that be easier?”
The queen only smiled wider, and, as her brother nodded his head in that strange manner people did where they may have been better off just shaking it, she said, “Oh, no, not at all.”
“On the contrary,” the tom agreed, and Cassandra hummed in what she hoped was polite listening. They certainly took it as such, and the tom gestured with fluidity as strange as the rest of them as he explained: “To crystalize meaningfully the path of a chosen individual is grueling work.”
“You must blow away the fog of uncertainty... and pick out a reflection from the puddles it leaves behind.” The queen was nodding, now, but at least she had something to nod about, Cassandra thought. The queen brushed her hand against the tom’s with some intent and added, thoughtfully – “It is thankless.”
“Agonizing,” the tom said, and they twined their hands together without so much as looking at each other.
Cassandra chuckled – she’d expected most of the things that happened throughout the evening, but this was quickly and unequivocally taking the cake. Still, she looked at them, gazing down at her with smiles brighter than the lamplight, and felt just a little embarrassed at her whip-stitched costume and her faded bowl. “Perhaps I should go with a theme I’m better-versed in, next year.”
“No, no, it wasn’t our aim to heckle you,” the queen said quickly, and glanced at her brother, whose expression had been suddenly tinged by worry at her words.
“We don’t mean to upset. We only so rarely get to discuss this.”
“Few will listen for even the time you have,” she said to Cassandra, who, at her appreciative tone and gentle expression, felt less soothed and moreso a little touched. Suddenly, though, the queen’s expression shifted – she looked as though she had remembered something, and touched the tom’s arm with some insistence. “But we have trapped you.”
“Yes, we will go along, leave you to a lovely evening,” he agreed, covering her hand with his own before they both let go as though coordinated. As she turned, though, he stayed her decisively with a hand against her stomach, and his smile widened at her curious expression; it seemed the first time, to Cassandra, that they were not so eerily in sync. “Would you consider reading my sister’s fortune, beforehand? Since you prefer it.”
Before Cassandra could remind them that she didn’t really prefer anything of the sort, and was indeed woefully inexperienced in the field they seemed so well-versed in, the queen all but gasped in quiet joy and scratched at her own chest with short-trimmed claws.
“I’d be ever so delighted to have it read; when was the last time?” She looked at the tom for confirmation. Cassandra had, without too much surprise, apparently assumed correctly in the two being siblings. “We were nine...”
“We were nine.” The tom smiled at her, very fondly, and here his expression was quickly mirrored again. Cassandra hated to disappoint them, truly, and they seemed quite sweet, but there was not much she could offer them.
“I can make something up, if you like,” she said, a little helplessly, and tapped at the sides of the bowl idly with the tips of her claws. She stopped when the sound made them both scowl, even as they refrained from saying anything about it and fixed more pleasant expressions back onto their faces before she could react. She chuckled to herself, glanced down again; she wasn’t even doing anything yet, and apparently she was already doing it wrong. “Again, I don’t know the technicalities of this.”
To her surprise, the queen nodded eagerly, and took a step closer to the bench – just one small, restless step, followed immediately by her brother. “Yes, that is, of course, a way to do it as well.”
“No false manner of doing it, none,” he assured her, and she wondered if they did any horoscope writing in their free time. Then she felt a little mean about it. “It is through unconscious association.”
“The things your mind sees before the eyes do,” the queen said, a little dreamily, and Cassandra nodded along. No, they had to have been writing horoscopes in their free time. “You don’t have to be clairvoyant.”
Something in her expression made Cassandra feel a little too perceived. She shifted to meet the tom’s eyes instead, only to find there, predictably, exactly the same sharpness to the sensation as he seconded his sister – “Simply observant.”
Everlasting – she hoped thought-reading wasn’t a part of their repertoire. She would’ve been terribly embarrassed if they were to learn from her that they sounded like the folks that wrote horoscopes.
To be fair, clairvoyant or not, bills needed paid.
“All right, well,” she said, finally, and, with one last burst of fiddling with the bowl, she lifted it from her lap and put it on the bench beside herself, looking up at where they stood expectantly. “You could show me how to do it? And then I could try myself.”
They shifted quick, and looked between each other. Cassandra tried not to crack a smile at the clear mortification that passed between them, albeit she wasn’t sure why that was.
The queen turned first, nodding as seriously as though they’d broken some untouchable rule of etiquette. “Ah – that would be most polite.”
“Yes, we overlooked our manners again,” he said, a little as though he was already used to it and so did not overthink it; he urged his sister forward gently, touching at her back. “Tantomile would read your palm.”
Tantomile, Cassandra thought. Before she could think anything else – anything other than That’s a really nice name, or, Wow, I’ve never heard that one before, Tantomile saved them both the embarrassment with the quickness of someone more than used to it – “It is my favourite. Coricopat’s is cards.”
“And dice,” Coricopat added. The name – fit him, she supposed. He looked like a Coricopat. Perhaps because neither of them looked like anyone else. Except each other, Cassandra noted. Naturally.
”And dice,” Tantomile conceded, and gestured lightly to the space beside Cassandra. “If I may sit beside you?”
“Right, yes.” She was moving out of the way before Tantomile had finished her sentence, her smile quirking up sideways as Tantomile lifted her tail to sit down. Cassandra glanced at Coricopat, and, surely enough, found his tail raised carefully as well, even as he stood still. She hummed, “I feel like you’re better suited for this spot anyway.”
”She is,” Coricopat said for her, and, when Tantomile raised her head, they looked wordlessly between themselves for a reason Cassandra could only begin to guess. They broke their gaze together, but Coricopat’s was the first to return to Cassandra, along with his smile. His sister, with no time to waste, took Cassandra by the hand. “But this is the night to play pretend. We can hardly pretend to be that which we truly are.”
��It would be silly,” Tantomile agreed, and, after casting just one exploratory glance at Cassandra’s palm, chuckled herself. Albeit Cassandra would never have known what for, Tantomile did not seem bothered by her confusion. She only idly patted her on the wrist and she glanced up for a moment before focusing on her palm again. “See – you’re a natural, Cassandra.”
She traced gently the lines in Cassandra’s skin, and Coricopat watched closely, and they treated her as carefully as they might a statue of glass. As Cassandra laughed, the wind carried away some of her inhibition – and, among other things, even the quiet, prodding thought that she had never told them her name.
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emimii · 10 months ago
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more misc cats doodles bcuz i have no other hobbies!
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gotham-native · 7 months ago
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all the 'Tugger poses' with Etcetera i could fine
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i love her she's perfect, i wish she was still in productions
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jellyfuljellicle · 4 days ago
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Day 5: Cassandra!
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Oh wow do I love Cassandra, and I think it showed through this piece! I gotta smooth down her design a bit more as she’s too plain looking for my liking but a great start nonetheless! ✨🐾❤️
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rice-pudding-slaps · 5 months ago
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What CATS character are you?
Rosario Muñoz as Victoria
Teresita Rojas as Etcétera
Nicolás Islas as Mungojerrie
Pia Velez as Cassandra
Isabella Burotto as Rumpleteazer
Francisca Barría as Tantomille (Mislabeled as Coricopat)
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elita-prime1 · 25 days ago
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GUYS I THINK WERE GONNA HAVE A MALE CASS SWING
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Apperently aaron david jenkings ( swing on cats china tour posted this an am freaking out!
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hysterical-cats · 7 months ago
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i love u cassandra with huge ears
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mrnuggets07 · 4 days ago
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DAY FIVE! CASSANDRA 😭
SHE'S TOO PRETTY AND I COULDN'T AND GAVE UP SO HERE'S CASSANDRA KITTY WITH A FLUTE OR WHATEVER
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mochatears · 2 months ago
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Ehehe … women … and Alonzo … It’s Demeter’s best friend since nappies, and Jem’s pseudo-aunt, Bombalurina! Alonzo, who’s Munkustrap’s childhood friend, and Jem’s pseudo-uncle! And also Cassandra, Alonzo’s not-girlfriend who he met on Tinder.
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This here is set just after Demeter comes back into Munk’s life, and her first reunion with Alonzo! He looks very different from the nerdy high schooler she last knew! He’s started going to the gym regularly. He’s still a nerd, though. He also used to cover his vitiligo because he hated standing out, but he doesn’t give a shit about that anymore.
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per-the-jellicle-magician · 4 months ago
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A little clip of "The Old Gumbie Cat" from Cats: the Jellice Ball aka Cats PAC NYC taken on August 27, with Kendall Grayson Stroud covering Jennyanydots, Emma Sofia as Cassandra, Dudney Joseph Jr. as Munkustrap and Bryce Farris covering Electra
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pinkieclown · 4 months ago
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Seven Cat Calls Event!
Celebrating my favorite CATS performers!
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Week 18 - Cassandra
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lightingelectratwo · 10 months ago
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This is my favorite Cassandra wig design .
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