The Queen of Hearts, known for beheading her subjects, is a soloist who performs an illusionist trick that makes it look as if a disconnected head can spin independent of the spine.

At the end of “Alice,” there are invisible performers behind a black curtain with slits and they manipulate large red roses attached to stems created with eight feet of black pipe.

MOMIX dance rehearsals and a variety of music help to incubate ideas. Pendleton wants his dancers to not just move to music, he wants them to become music.

The Connecticut studio, where Pendleton works with his longtime partner and associate director Cynthia Quinn, is equipped with quadraphonic sound.

“I use music in the creative process, almost like a therapist or psychologist,” Pendleton says.

“Sound frees up the dancer, and I get them not to think choreographically but to react to the environment of sound, so, they begin to put on a performance of play. There is much going on in the stream of the unconscious, and I’m trying to tap into that, so they improvise. I come up with a lot of interesting things. I try to be a catalyst — inspire them, humor them, excite them, frighten them but video tape them, as well. At morning coffee, the next day, there may be shards of information that can be reworked into the piece.”

“Alice” is an all-ages show and Pendleton stresses that it’s not a literal depiction, rather, it’s a fantastical and figurative portrayal.

Like past interpretations of the Alice in Wonderland story by Tim Burton, Salvador Dali and Walt Disney, Pendleton says he took the iconic characters and images from the original and created a MOMIX in Wonderland.

The show is accompanied by 20 pieces of music, chosen to be heard as “a musical curve to the evening.”

One of the songs picked for “ALICE” is Jefferson Airplane’s 1967 recording of “White Rabbit,” a song written by Grace Slick.

“We had to put that in there,” Pendleton says warmly.

“It’s very recognizable. And if you don’t know what you are looking at, ask Alice. When she’s 10 feet tall.”

La Jolla Music Society presents MOMIX: ‘Alice’

When: 7:30 p.m. Saturday

Where: San Diego Civic Theatre, 1100 Third Ave., San Diego

Tickets: $39.95-$129.05

Phone: 858-459-3728

Online: sandiegotheatres.org