Co-director Roger Allers has reportedly said, “….we used a variety of inspirations. While it’s true that the filmmakers traveled to Kenya’s Hell’s Gate National Park to research the animals and landscape, the look of Pride Rock itself was something that came straight from the minds of the animators. Many curious fans have dug into The Lion King’s production history in search of the real-life landmark that inspired Pride Rock, believing that it exists somewhere in Kenya. It would also go on to become the signature set piece in Julie Taymor’s Broadway production of The Lion King. It is where baby Simba is introduced to the world where Scar meets his fate and where Simba and Nala’s baby is held aloft in the film’s final, bookending moments. The opening scene of The Lion King introduced audiences to the movie’s signature sound and feel, but also to one of its most indelible images: Pride Rock, a jutting formation of giant rocks that becomes almost an amphitheater on which much of the film’s key action takes place. Then, suddenly, Lebo cried out “Nants ingonyama bagithi Baba,” and all present agreed – instantly – that the chant would open the film. At first, it looked like the session was not going anywhere, and that the team might not have the right music for the opening scene ahead of a screening for executives. Zimmer and the directors told the composer what they wanted to do with the opening scene, and, during one session, Lebo began to riff on ideas. Hans Zimmer ( pictured above), who had been brought on to compose the score, tapped Lebo M., a then-exiled South African composer living in the U.S., to help with the music. The Zulu section – including the famous “Nants ingonyama bagithi Baba!” – came about in similarly inspired fashion. “By half-past three, he’d finished writing and recording a stunning demo.” “I gave him the lyrics at the beginning of the session at about two in the afternoon,” Rice says in The New Illustrated Treasury of Disney Songs. Lyricist Tim Rice has said that the main melody was dreamed up by Elton John in less than two hours. Both of the song’s key elements – the memorable Zulu chant that opens the film, as well as the sung English verses and chorus – were created in moments of sudden inspiration. It’s hard to believe that a song as powerful as “The Circle of Life” – which opens the film, stage show, and presumably also the upcoming live-action film – came together so quickly. The Song Was Written in Two Major Flurries of Inspiration Ultimately, the filmmakers went in a different direction, opting for zero dialogue, and move history was made. Also, in one early incarnation of the scene we were to meet The Lion King’s villain, Scar, who was to be shown angrily watching over the proceedings until being noticed and slinking away. For starters, rather than simply show the animals wordlessly moving towards Pride Rock, the scene was to feature dialogue one early iteration would have them sing a prayer in Swahili. Originally, the scene – now widely regarded as one of the most awe-inspiring movie openings ever – was going to be quite different. Twenty-five years on, it has lost none of its ability to drop your jaw. The opening moments of The Lion King are some of the most powerful moments Disney animators have ever put to screen: from the second Lebo M.’s Zulu chant kicks in over a rising red sun, to the moment that same sun slices through the clouds to bless baby Simba, held skyward by Rafiki, the sequence holds the audience in its thrall. “The Circle of Life” Might Have Looked Very Different Here’s how it came together – and how it almost looked, and sounded, completely different. To celebrate the anniversary of the original game-changing animated classic, we’re looking back at its first few minutes, which make up one of the most spellbinding opening sequences in movie history. And it’s just less than a month before Disney’s new take on the story lands in cinemas across the country. It’s been 25 ears since The Lion King was released in theaters on June 24, 1994. Here’s a list of songs from both versions of Disney’s Sing Along Songs series 3 volume 1 – “Circle of Life”, which was hosted on its original version by Jiminy Cricket.(Photo by ©Walt Disney Pictures/courtesy Everett Collection) Thus, that animated classic’s main theme is the central song for the volume, which was later re-released in 2003 with additional songs from some animated series and home video animated films. The concluding volumes of the second series of Disney’s Sing Along Songs home video franchise following “A Friend Like Me” in 1993 were all mostly original and traditional songs outside of the Disney musical library barring a few selections one of the volumes in fact was yet another Christmas album.Ĭome 1994 however, a third series of the whimsical Disney karaoke was begun, with its inaugural volume released in time to celebrate the then-recent premiere of The Lion King.
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