When Barbara Marineau told the story of the power outage and that she was in SHENANDOAH, I 'freaked'. I saw that production 1 week after the power outage. Serendipity? She was great in SHENANDOAH. It was the first show I saw on Broadway.
Awesome Behind The Scenes Look About Disney's Beauty And The Beast The Broadway Musical In New York City. This Is Before Disney's The Lion King At London's Lyceum Theatre In London's West End. I've Also Can't Wait To Go And See Disney's Beauty And The Beast's UK And Ireland Tour At Bristol Hippodrome Theatre In Bristol In England This Year. Wish Me Luck. Thanks Mate. X
This is amazing! Thank you for sharing! I'm just a bit confused, as this looks WAY closer to the original Broadway production, costume and set wise, than the touring show I saw a few years back. The castle tower for "If I can't love her" is still here, yet the one I saw only had a golden stair case that was used for the majority of the inner/outer castle scenes. The Beasts costume also looks exactly like the one on Broadway did, while the one I saw had no bare fur chest, and the makeup seemed simpler. Would love to know what happened.
If I recall correctly (and it's been 20 years, so I may be confusing productions), the shows in Florida/Michigan were on the tailend of that particular run of the tour. The show was going to be scaled back shortly after the East Lansing stop in order to accommodate smaller venues and tighter schedules. I'm pretty sure I remember someone saying that it would be the last time we'd see it in that form. What they've done since, or if there are various-sized productions on tour, I have no idea.
@@Area51ESD that sucks :( I really was looking forward to it, and although I did enjoy it, it did feel really lacking in the budget department. Didn’t feel too much like Broadway, and more like a smaller, community theatre production. Still fun, but not what was expected of a Disney show. The Lion King tour, however, does look exactly as it does on Broadway. Save for VERY minor changes, primarily sets. Only main change being Pride Rock being mobile, instead of coming out of the stage floor. Which is honestly pretty cool.
This is the 3rd national tour, for beauty and the beast that started 2001. When the 4th tour started I saw it in Chicago, most of the less well known songs were removed. With if I can't love her and a change in me in tact in the show. With less pyro effects to keep the cast safer. Of course to make the show more money efficient was to down size the set, it isn't every 6 weeks we see huge semi trucks traveling along. Nowadays we have weight restrictions on most highways.
I'm not sure if I fully understand the question, but the pacing of the special was based on the amount of time that we had for the program, the desire to focus on local talent, and the material that Disney requested that we cover.
When Barbara Marineau told the story of the power outage and that she was in SHENANDOAH, I 'freaked'. I saw that production 1 week after the power outage. Serendipity? She was great in SHENANDOAH. It was the first show I saw on Broadway.
She was incredibly sweet to us while we filmed this special. We were very fortunate to be able to share her story.
Awesome Behind The Scenes Look About Disney's Beauty And The Beast The Broadway Musical In New York City. This Is Before Disney's The Lion King At London's Lyceum Theatre In London's West End. I've Also Can't Wait To Go And See Disney's Beauty And The Beast's UK And Ireland Tour At Bristol Hippodrome Theatre In Bristol In England This Year. Wish Me Luck. Thanks Mate. X
I remember this show and my mother took me to see it.
on ice
My favorite character from Disney's Beauty and the Beast on Broadway is Mrs. Potts because she wants to make sure everyone is safe in the castle.
I love this musical Disney is the best
This is amazing! Thank you for sharing! I'm just a bit confused, as this looks WAY closer to the original Broadway production, costume and set wise, than the touring show I saw a few years back. The castle tower for "If I can't love her" is still here, yet the one I saw only had a golden stair case that was used for the majority of the inner/outer castle scenes. The Beasts costume also looks exactly like the one on Broadway did, while the one I saw had no bare fur chest, and the makeup seemed simpler. Would love to know what happened.
If I recall correctly (and it's been 20 years, so I may be confusing productions), the shows in Florida/Michigan were on the tailend of that particular run of the tour. The show was going to be scaled back shortly after the East Lansing stop in order to accommodate smaller venues and tighter schedules. I'm pretty sure I remember someone saying that it would be the last time we'd see it in that form. What they've done since, or if there are various-sized productions on tour, I have no idea.
@@Area51ESD that sucks :( I really was looking forward to it, and although I did enjoy it, it did feel really lacking in the budget department. Didn’t feel too much like Broadway, and more like a smaller, community theatre production. Still fun, but not what was expected of a Disney show. The Lion King tour, however, does look exactly as it does on Broadway. Save for VERY minor changes, primarily sets. Only main change being Pride Rock being mobile, instead of coming out of the stage floor. Which is honestly pretty cool.
This is the 3rd national tour, for beauty and the beast that started 2001. When the 4th tour started I saw it in Chicago, most of the less well known songs were removed. With if I can't love her and a change in me in tact in the show. With less pyro effects to keep the cast safer. Of course to make the show more money efficient was to down size the set, it isn't every 6 weeks we see huge semi trucks traveling along. Nowadays we have weight restrictions on most highways.
I have seen a cheaper touring version, most of the sets were like cardboard cutouts and some songs were missing
I love Beauty and the beast!
This is probably the most 90s looking musical of all time.
What is this pacing
I'm not sure if I fully understand the question, but the pacing of the special was based on the amount of time that we had for the program, the desire to focus on local talent, and the material that Disney requested that we cover.
You mean that background sound throughout the video ?