The Lion King Celebration

The Lion King Celebration
Disneyland
Status Removed
Opening date June 1, 1994
Closing date June 1, 1997
Replaced Aladdin's Royal Caravan
Replaced by Hercules' Victory Parade
General statistics
Attraction type Parade
Theme The Lion King
Floats Six

The Lion King Celebration was a parade based on the Disney 1994 animated film The Lion King. The parade's design centred around the story of Simba, the main protagonist of The Lion King, as if it were a tale passed down in Africa for generations.[1] The lineup featured six floats designed around different aspects of African culture, dancers dressed in animal costumes, and a Pride Rock float featuring Simba and Nala. The parade ran at Disneyland from June 1, 1994 to June 1, 1997, after which four of the floats were moved to Disney's Animal Kingdom for the Festival of the Lion King show.

Subsequent parades featuring The Lion King floats at Disney parks, including Walt Disney's Parade of Dreams, have re-used assets and concepts from The Lion King Celebration.

Production

During a typical show a total of 89 cast members performed in The Lion King Celebration. This included 56 dancers, 12 puppeteers, 10 acrobatic pole dancers, 6 musicians and 5 remote control operators.[1]

The Lion King Celebration featured the first use of Audio-Animatronics in a Disneyland parade. It also featured the first use of "Puppetronics", a technique used to create the large, lifelike animal puppets featured on the floats. Puppetronics allowed the animatronic animals to be controlled by a puppeteer but still retain complex movement, allowing for a smoother and more realistic performance.[1]

Design

The design of the parade had strong roots in traditional African artwork, featuring vibrant colors, traditional designs, and dance routines based on traditional African dances.

African artist Betty LaDuke designed and painted a sculpture of three monkeys that sat behind Nala on the Pride Rock float.[2][1]

Production team

Role Staff
Producer Nance Weenick
Production Manager Joey Michaels
Show Director Robert Ponce
Assistant Director/Senior Choreographer/African Dance Consultant Sylvia Hase
Art Director Steve Bass
Music Director Bruce Healy
Writer Tom Childs
Technical Director Ted Carlsson
Choreographer Mark Nordike
Costume Designer Alyja Clegg
Costumer Roseanne Yokoyama

Plot

[3] Set to a mostly instrumental version of the song "I Just Can't Wait to Be King", the first characters to appear are two rhinoceroses, followed by tribal dancers, drummers and a float featuring Zazu and Rafiki with two giraffes. Zazu and Rafiki introduce the parade as it continues down Main Street, U.S.A..

A herd of gazelle dancers dressed in spandex costumes with hoods precede a float with tribal gazelle designs, pushed along by wildebeest dancers. They are followed by a group of tribal crane dancers, the elephant float and two remote-controlled crocodiles. The elephant float occasionally shoots a stream of water from its trunk. In the first year of the show, the larger "mother" elephant was preceded by a smaller "baby" elephant whose costume was similar to that of the previously mentioned rhinoceroses, only larger. Two pole dancers dressed in tribal bird costumes walk at the sides.

Leopard dancers dance around the Rain Forest float, which features monkey dancers on swings and Pumbaa on the back. Pumbaa talks to Timon, who follows behind while chasing three remote-controlled bugs including a scorpion and a rhinoceros beetle.

Two tribal-bird pole dancers lead the Drum Dancer float, which features drummers, dancers and percussionists in colourful, vibrant tribal costumes.

The last float - Pride Rock - is led by a group of zebra and cheetah dancers, two tribal elephant dancers and two tribal bird dancers. Simba stands atop Pride Rock while Nala roars and drums out the beat with her paw at the foot of the float. Above them, Mufasa's face is represented in a spinning sun design. The end of the parade is marked by two tribal zebra performers holding a rope.

The parade eventually stops and Mufasa's voice is heard telling Simba to take his place in the Circle of Life. The song "Circle of Life" begins to play and the dancers dance and leap around the floats as the drummers drum along to the song. At the end of the song, Simba roars and white doves are released from one of the floats, symbolizing hope and peace.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Disneyland Presents The Lion King Celebration: VHS
  2. "Betty LaDuke". Hanson Howard Gallery. March 2009. Archived from the original on August 10, 2014.
  3. "The Lion King Celebration". Yesterland. Retrieved 20 February 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.