When Shrek leaves, she later learns he stole one of her potions (the Happily Ever After potion to be specific), and realizes that she could use this to her advantage. However, she spites him by saying that ogres don't live happily ever after, citing multiple endings of other fairy tales to prove her point. She is then visited by Shrek, Donkey, and Puss, who come to her for help. While she's there, she is brewing a love potion, which included "a drop of desire, a pinch of passion and just a hint of lust" singing her same song. The Fairy Godmother convinces Harold to find a way to get Shrek out of the picture before returning to her " cottage", which is actually a large factory where she manufactures spells and potions. To learn more, she picks up her son and goes to confront Fiona's father Harold, who reveals that Shrek had gone to the castle and freed Fiona first. Arriving, the Fairy Godmother is surprised to learn that Fiona is married to an ogre named Shrek. The Fairy Godmother is first seen when Fiona goes to her bedroom balcony and cries, her tears supposedly calling to the Fairy Godmother. The Fairy Godmother checking a book to prove to Shrek that ogres don't live happily ever after In Shrek 2 she appears as the main antagonist. Lillian however, unlike Harold, didn't like the Fairy Godmother, mentioning that she didn't trust her. She insisted only True Love's Kiss would break the curse, and decided to put her in a tower until her son Prince Charming is old enough to rescue her. They later had a daughter named Fiona, but when they saw her become an ogress, they sought her help. She promised to turn him human, on the condition that his first-born daughter will take her son's hand in marriage. In particular, a local frog named Harold was smitten for the princess, Lillian. Eventually she would begin to help other fairytale characters achieve their happy endings. While her past is largely unknown, she would grow to become the most successful potion manufacturer in Far Far Away. Despite being a different character, her name would be carried over for the Fairy Godmother. She was going to be voiced by Linda Hunt. Her role would've then played similarly to the book, telling Shrek about the princess and their future. Fiona, a woman born an ogress, approaches her out of desperation to be "beautiful." Fortuna gives her a beauty potion, which has no effect but Fortuna tells Fiona she will change between human in daytime, and ogre in nighttime until she finds true love. In an alternate opening to the first Shrek film, there was a character named Dama Fortuna, based on the Witch from Shrek!, who narrated the first quarter of the opening through her tarot cards. Dama Fortuna in the scrapped story board for Shrek's original opening prologue
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