Wonderland: Alice's New Musical Adventure Lyrics – All Songs from the Musical
Wonderland: Alice's New Musical Adventure Lyrics: Song List
- Act 1
- Overture
- Worst Day of My Life
- Down the Rabbit Hole
- Welcome to Wonderland
- Drink Me
- Advice From a Caterpillar
- Go With The Flow
- One Knight
- Mad Tea Party
- The Mad Hatter
- Hail to the Queen
- Home
- A Nice Little Walk
- Through the Looking Glass
- Act 2
- I Will Prevail
- I Am My Own Invention
- Off with Their Heads!
- Once More I Can See
- Heroes
- Together
- Finding Wonderland
- Other Songs
- Curiouser and Curiouser
- The Mad Hatter (alternative)
- Don't Wanna Fall in Love
- Love Begins
- Nick of Time
- Advice From a Caterpillar (alternative)
- Misunderstood
- Hail the Queen
About the "Wonderland: Alice's New Musical Adventure" Stage Show
Release date: 2011
"Wonderland – Original Broadway Cast Album (2011)" Soundtrack Description

FAQ
- Is there an official soundtrack album?
Yes—the Original Broadway Cast album was released in 2011 and is widely available on major streaming services and in digital stores. - Who created the score?
Music by Frank Wildhorn with lyrics by Jack Murphy; the book is by Murphy and Gregory Boyd. - What kind of music is it?
A pop-forward Broadway score that skates between jazz, Latin pop, vaudeville pastiche, power ballads, and glossy radio pop. - Which numbers became fan favorites?
“Once More I Can See,” “I Will Prevail,” “Go With the Flow,” “One Knight,” and finale “Finding Wonderland.” - What plays at the Mad Tea Party?
Act I features “The Tea Party,” then the Mad Hatter’s entrance number follows shortly after.
Notes & Trivia
- The Broadway production opened April 17, 2011 and closed May 15, 2011—fast run, enduring cast album.
- El Gato, the Cheshire Cat with a Latin twist, leads the vibe-shifter “Go With the Flow.”
- The Mad Hatter is reimagined as a female antagonist with a roof-raising Act II anthem (“I Will Prevail”).
- Jason Howland served as Supervising Music Director (and conductor); Kim Scharnberg handled orchestrations and musical supervision.
- The album production team included Frank Wildhorn, Jason Howland, and David Lai.
- Karen Mason’s Queen of Hearts gets a comic showpiece in “Off With Their Heads.”
- The finale, “Finding Wonderland,” doubles as the show’s thesis: reclaiming curiosity beats conquering chaos.

Overview
Why does a modern Alice hit Queens, New York, then tumble into big-chorus, radio-ready pop? Because Wonderland swaps Victorian whimsy for 2011 gloss: synths, backbeat, and a villain with a belt note for days. The cast album bottles that neon—hooks first, meaning right behind it. Under the sparkle the score works like a compass. Jazz sidesteps for the Caterpillar’s cool counsel, a Latin groove stalks with El Gato, and power ballads give Alice the air she needs to breathe. It’s an unapologetically commercial soundscape, tuned to make character beats feel like singles.Genres & Themes
- Pop-Broadway power ballads ? Alice’s self-repair and clear-sightedness (“Once More I Can See,” “Finding Wonderland”).
- Latin pop / funk ? Cheshire-cat mischief with swagger (“Go With the Flow”).
- Jazz lounge ? Caterpillar’s analytic, smooth advice (“Advice from a Caterpillar”).
- Rock/anthem ? Mad Hatter’s control and ambition (“I Will Prevail”).
- Vaudeville/pastiche ? Court and tea-party chaos, playful world-building (“The Tea Party,” “Hail the Queen”).

Key Tracks & Scenes
- “Welcome to Wonderland” — Alice & Company
Where it plays: Early Act I as Alice arrives below the city; stage-world orientation.
Why it matters: Establishes the rules and rush—bright, hooky world-building. - “Advice from a Caterpillar” — Caterpillar, Alice & Legs
Where it plays: Act I, in the Caterpillar’s jazzy haunt; diegetic show number inside the world.
Why it matters: Smooth counsel reframes Alice’s panic into observation. - “Go With the Flow” — El Gato, Alice & Cats
Where it plays: Act I, El Gato sidetracks Alice with a Latin-pop detour.
Why it matters: Misdirects plot while loosening Alice’s grip—style equals temptation. - “One Knight” — Jack the White Knight & Knights
Where it plays: Act I, comic set-piece for Alice’s would-be rescuer.
Why it matters: Parodies pop bravado to show Jack’s charm and limits. - “The Mad Hatter” — Mad Hatter & Company
Where it plays: Act I, post–tea party entrance statement.
Why it matters: Stakes the villain’s claim; rock textures sharpen the threat. - “Off With Their Heads” — Queen of Hearts
Where it plays: Act II, the Queen’s comic-command number.
Why it matters: Breaks tension with campy danger; crowd-pleasing bite. - “I Will Prevail” — Mad Hatter
Where it plays: Act II, solo power anthem.
Why it matters: The Hatter’s manifesto—ambition sung at full throttle. - “Once More I Can See” — Alice
Where it plays: Mid–Act II self-reckoning ballad.
Why it matters: Emotional center; clarity becomes sound. - “Finding Wonderland” — Alice & Company
Where it plays: Finale.
Why it matters: Mission statement: curiosity restored, family rebalanced.
Music–Story Links (characters & plot beats as connected to songs)
- When Alice tumbles “Down the Rabbit Hole,” the next song’s welcome chorus isn’t just spectacle; it tells us she’s inside a world that sings its rules.
- El Gato’s groove teaches compliance—go with the nonsense—and shows how easy it is to lose the thread when the tune slaps.
- The Hatter’s Act II anthem flips the show’s pop language into menace: self-creation without empathy curdles into control.
- Alice’s ballads track a thought process—panic ? perspective (“Once More I Can See”) ? practice (“Finding Wonderland”).
- The court numbers (“Hail the Queen,” “Off With Their Heads”) weaponize pomp; comedy masks power until it doesn’t.

How It Was Made (supervision, score, behind-the-scenes)
- Authors: Frank Wildhorn (music); Jack Murphy (lyrics); book by Murphy & Gregory Boyd.
- Music team: Kim Scharnberg (orchestrations & musical supervision); Jason Howland (supervising music director, conductor; incidental & dance arrangements); Ron Melrose & Jason Howland (vocal arrangements).
- Cast on album: Janet Dacal (Alice), Kate Shindle (Mad Hatter), Karen Mason (Queen of Hearts/Edwina), Jose Llana (El Gato), Darren Ritchie (Jack/White Knight), Edward Staudenmayer (White Rabbit), Carly Rose Sonenclar (Chloe), E. Clayton Cornelious (Caterpillar).
- Album production: Produced by Frank Wildhorn, Jason Howland, and David Lai.
- Design DNA (stage): Neil Patel’s sets, Susan Hilferty’s costumes, Sven Ortel’s projections, Marguerite Derricks’s choreography—shaping the album’s “big canvas” feel.
- Character swing: The Hatter was reconceived as a female antagonist, sharpening the pop-rock edge heard on the album.
Reception & Quotes
“Peppily inspirational… with a convoluted story line.” Charles Isherwood, The New York Times
“The surface often impresses, though the substance just as often disappoints.” Everett Evans, Houston Chronicle
“Physically impressive… a score that ranges from vaudeville to Broadway bombast, jazz.” Variety
Technical Info
- Title: Wonderland – Original Broadway Cast Album
- Year: 2011
- Type: Original Broadway Cast Recording (from the 2011 Marquis Theatre production)
- Composers/Lyricist: Frank Wildhorn (music); Jack Murphy (lyrics)
- Book: Jack Murphy & Gregory Boyd
- Orchestrations / Music Supervision: Kim Scharnberg
- Supervising Music Director / Conductor: Jason Howland
- Vocal Arrangements: Ron Melrose & Jason Howland
- Choreography (stage): Marguerite Derricks
- Label: Masterworks Broadway
- Album Release: May 3, 2011
- Broadway Run (context): Opened April 17, 2011; closed May 15, 2011 (Marquis Theatre)
- Selected notable placements on album: “Welcome to Wonderland,” “Advice from a Caterpillar,” “Go With the Flow,” “One Knight,” “The Mad Hatter,” “Off With Their Heads,” “Once More I Can See,” “I Will Prevail,” “Finding Wonderland.”
- Availability: Widely streaming and for digital purchase.