Showing posts with label Lion King. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lion King. Show all posts

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Voice (Child) Actors, or How it's the Rugrats Blog-A-Thon

I had so much fun compiling this post on Voice Actressexuality for TFE that I figured I'd do something along the same lines for My Stuff and Cr*p's Rug Rats Blog-A-Thon (somehow the words "niche" and "specialization" are ringing in my ears... I have no idea why).

But it is true: when do people sit down and chat about Child Actors, let alone Voice Child Actors? That may be because there aren't that many VCA (yes, I'm coining the acronym as we speak) parts - did you know Lisa and Bart Simpson, all those Rugrats and even Disney's Doug (all lovable animated kids) aren't voiced by kids themselves? I guess it's easier to accommodate adults' schedules (and talents!) for a TV series, which is why I found more VCAs in films rather than in the tube.

And while great adult performances can make kid roles really entertaining, I give props to child actors whose voices go beyond merely what's on the page and you can really feel they are lived-in characters (This might also be a tip of the hat to the directors involved who knew what to get and how to use it). And so, this is why today, I'm I spotlighting the kids who stepped up to the plate and create lovable animated kids:

Judith Barsi
(Ducky,
Land Before Time & Anne-Marie, All Dogs Go to Heaven)









Regardless of the tragic ending of little Ms Barsi (she was murdered by her father alonside her mother back in 1988, there's no denying what Don Bluth saw in her to have her voice two memorable characters in his late 80s movies. Ducky is just a wonderful creation (coming from a movie I adored while growing up) that helps give the film that innocence and wonderful playful nature that along with Petrie off-sets the more mature themes of loss and family, while Anne-Marie is the emotional core in a film that nicely balances her story with the antics of Charlie and Itchy.

Signature Line: Yep yep yep!

Jonathan Taylor Thomas
(Simba,
The Lion King)











Oh JTT. What would the 90s have done without you? Seriously, was there anything Mr triple-named Thomas didn't attempt? Thankfully, his voice was the right combination of innocence and arrogance needed to make little Simba a wide-eyed cub before he learns to live by Hakuna Matata after witnessing his father's death (which I still stand by is the 'Bambi's mother's death of our time!). I adore in particular the scenes he shares with Jeremy Iron er... Scar, where the obvious pitch, style and tone of each creates the core tension in the film: JTT's childish though good-natured bravery matched by Irons' calm, cool and collected (if altogether cowardly) courage.

Signature Line: Oh I just can't wait to be king!

Mary Gibbs
(Boo,
Monsters Inc.)











I dare anyone to watch Monsters, Inc. and NOT fall in love with the adorable Boo. Sure, most of the line readings are incomprehensible to both the audience and the monsters who take care of orphan Boo in their world but that's what makes the very vocal and tiny Boo so affecting - it's all in her shrieks and laughs that we are put in the same position as Goodman's Sulley and Crystal's Mike. Pete Docter deserves probably most of the praise for this performance, but in Boo I saw a young girl so true to life I couldn't pass up the opportunity to glorify a child performance (and a kid character) that doesn't need to be quipping and bantering, nor being innocent and wide-eyed, but instead being just herself: laughing when she wants to, pointing to what she needs and colouring whatever she sees.

Signature Line: Kitty!

Alexander Gould
(Nemo,
Finding Nemo)











While the breakout voice performance might have come from a certain out blonde comedienne, Gould holds his own against the likes of Brad Garret, Willem Defoe and even Allison Janney, in that character-ful fish tank, creating a clown fish worth an entire film and an adventure across to sea. Continuing the motifs of the actors discussed before, Gould imbues Nemo with an optimistic and willful voice (again juxtaposed to Defoe's threatening but well-meaning Gill).

Signature Line: I have a bad fin...

Okay, I'll retreat to my animated bubble now and await the likes of Kristin Chenoweth (Disney's Rapunzel) and Anika Noni Rose (Disney's The Princess and the Frog) - because yes, I do enjoy a good voice acting gig in the muddled 'genre' (though people! It's actually a medium!) that is now plagued with Murphy just doing his thang and A-listers phoning it in.

Friday, October 26, 2007

Triple Threat, or How I enjoy "K" theatre

As I was watching Disney's/Julie Taymor's The Lion King I started to think of other moments in my life as a theatre-goer that have grabbed me to the extent that Taymor's reimagining of the classic Hamletian Disney movie. I mean, the puppets, the lighting, the staging, the music - everything in the production was designed to overload its audience with the full power of a theatre-going experience. Its merits need not be reproduced here (though I will say that the 'seeing Mufasa's reflection' scene and the stampede scene - two, in my mind, unstageable scenes were the highlight of what is arguably a flawless production) but I will reiterate how big a fan of Ms Taymor (with Titus, Frida, Across the Universe and this she keeps proving that she's versatile, original and always pushing boundaries - here's to see what she'll come up with next... er okay, maybe I'll wait and see how that Spiderman Musical turns out)
Looking back, I can only isolate two other productions that have come close to giving me such chills and made me at once notice and revel in the theatrical conventions presented in said productions; productions that wear their means of staging and 'construction' on their sleeves and still manage to succeed in creating an illusion in it audience that propels the story forward in a way that doesn't feel or look too 'gimmicky':

Ka - (seen December 2006)
Cirque du Soleil
MGM Grand in Las Vegas
Great Cirque du Soleil production which didn't just rely on the beautifully choreographed acrobatics that one is used to seeing from the Cirque, but through them told the story of twin brother and sister being torn and apart and reunited after years of estrangement.




K. - (seen in January 2004)
Kaleidoscope Theatre, Rumble Productions and UBC Theatre
Frederic Wood Theatre at UBC
Visual and aural theatre pushed to the limit in this existential exploration of Kafka in his last living hours - surrounded by doctors, hallucinations, video projections and a looming filing closet as a backdrop. One of the most kinetic productions of any kind I have ever attended.

It logically follows that I can safely say I tend to enjoy (and find theatrical as well as artistic value) in Theatrical productions that have the letter "K" in them.
This is where I would dispel should arbitrary classification, and then I remembered I am anticipating a similar theatre-going experience when I go and watch WicKed (sometime in the next couple of months) - and so the K theory continues...

Friday, August 24, 2007

Mirror Mirror on the...Pond? or How I am Seeing Double

Is NBC drawing on a well-established cliche perfected by these guys at Disney ?



Knowing Hayden, she probably did break into song on the set while looking at her reflection.