#1
Posted: 9/1/16 at 9:01am
Despite having seen hundreds of Broadway shows the past 10 years, I had never gotten around to Lion King until last night, when I won the lottery. I was very optimistic after hearing two decades of praise.
I was extremely disappointed, and after a search of this board, I see that I'm not alone in that opinion. However, I'm guessing it's gotten even worse recently, so I'm wondering if those that have seen it multiple times can confirm my suspicions:
- The set and costumes looked run down. The most egregious was a large rip in the accordion paper sun so it hung asymmetrically.
- Many performers were out of sync and awkwardly looking around at other dancers to figure out if they were on the right step. The cast on the whole looked unsuited for a Broadway stage. During the stampede, actors stood on stage and listlessly moved the wildebeest heads back and forth. I felt zero tension.
- There were many voice cracks, off-key notes, and sound balance issues. You couldn't hear Scar at all in Be Prepared.
- There are feeble attempts to keep the show relevant. Zazu quotes Frozen at least 5 times, attempts at humor that felt oddly anachronistic.
If you dropped me in my seat and told me it was an amateur community theater with a big prop budget, I would have believed you.
Add all this to the fact that the show drags and unsuccessfully treads the line between kiddy theater and a Broadway show. Flashing a strobe during fight choreography or 0.5mph falls doesn't hide the lack of realism. The techno dance breaks, the LSD trip in "Just Can't Wait to be King," and the electric guitar orchestrations feel out of place. And when the costumes are not mimicking animals, they look like a cross between Maasai warriors and 80s rap video backup dancers.
Of course, the 99% tourist, mostly-foreign crowd ate it up--when they weren't talking through the entire show, that is. It grosses $2mm a week, so I guess at the end of the day it really doesn't matter if everyone is phoning it in.
But I'm curious--how much of it is recent deterioration, and how much of it is the show itself?
I was extremely disappointed, and after a search of this board, I see that I'm not alone in that opinion. However, I'm guessing it's gotten even worse recently, so I'm wondering if those that have seen it multiple times can confirm my suspicions:
- The set and costumes looked run down. The most egregious was a large rip in the accordion paper sun so it hung asymmetrically.
- Many performers were out of sync and awkwardly looking around at other dancers to figure out if they were on the right step. The cast on the whole looked unsuited for a Broadway stage. During the stampede, actors stood on stage and listlessly moved the wildebeest heads back and forth. I felt zero tension.
- There were many voice cracks, off-key notes, and sound balance issues. You couldn't hear Scar at all in Be Prepared.
- There are feeble attempts to keep the show relevant. Zazu quotes Frozen at least 5 times, attempts at humor that felt oddly anachronistic.
If you dropped me in my seat and told me it was an amateur community theater with a big prop budget, I would have believed you.
Add all this to the fact that the show drags and unsuccessfully treads the line between kiddy theater and a Broadway show. Flashing a strobe during fight choreography or 0.5mph falls doesn't hide the lack of realism. The techno dance breaks, the LSD trip in "Just Can't Wait to be King," and the electric guitar orchestrations feel out of place. And when the costumes are not mimicking animals, they look like a cross between Maasai warriors and 80s rap video backup dancers.
Of course, the 99% tourist, mostly-foreign crowd ate it up--when they weren't talking through the entire show, that is. It grosses $2mm a week, so I guess at the end of the day it really doesn't matter if everyone is phoning it in.
But I'm curious--how much of it is recent deterioration, and how much of it is the show itself?