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(image-http://i285.photobucket.com/albums/ll43/davidm1992/Musicalpic.jpg)
The Lion King is a musical on Broadway and the Lyceum theatre in London's West End. It is very different to other musicals, probably because all the characters are animals and it is set in Africa. The beautiful masks and costumes along with the African-style music really sets the atmosphere for this musical. Dance and ethnic ritual are used. Life-sized puppets are also used. The video shows that even on a West End stage the African kingdom can be recreated. The actors have mechanical headpieces that make their movements more animal-like. This helps the audience to imagine real African animals on the stage. The Lion King is set in a place called Pride Rock. The main part of the kingdom in the film and the stage musical is the large rock, where many important events take place. Spiral staircases and trap doors allow the actors to get where they need to be.
The names of the charcters in the musical also show that this is an African production. Mufasa, Nala, Simba, Zazoo and Rafiki are some examples. The famous song, "Hakuna Matata", is a swahili phrase meaning "there are no worries". In the West End, Richard Hudson is the stage designer and he himselg is from Zimbabwe. To conclude, the wonderful costumes, believable set and African-style music really creates the African Kingdom on the stage.
http://www.nvtc.gov/lotw/months/september/swahili.html
http://tourism.vic.gov.au/piecesofvictoria/april_2005/i/78168.jpg
http://www2.salzburg.info/soundofmusic.html
The movie "The Sound Of Music" was filmed in all of these locations in Austria and was very famous. In 2006, after the hit tv show to find the West End's Maria, the much anticipated show hit London's Palladium Theatre. Alex Hitchcock, who has automated many West End Productions (Oliver, Mary Poppins..) programmed the automation control in "The Sound of Music". The beautiful hills and mountains are a big part of "The Sound Of Music". They are where Maria sings "The Hills Are Alive" and where the Von Trapp family are seen at the end of the story, running away. In The London Palladium, there is a 12 ton automated mountain. The set building company Scena worked on this mountain with stage technologies. It can be raised, lowered and rotated using an acrobat control console. Large, automated trucks bring the abbey and the Von Trapp mansion onto the stage in four sections. Each truck can rotate in quickly and fluidly from the interior to the exterior of the set using onboard drive systems. Big Tow winches fly backdrops onstage. These are used for the abbey and also Maria's bedroom in the Von Trapp mansion. A travelator whisks performers and furniture off stage quickly.
The Set makes this musical come alive and shows the beautiful scenery of Austria. http://livedesignonline.com/theatre/stage_electrics_martin_sound_of_music_021507/
map (http://www.holidaycityeurope.com/salzburghotels/map.gif)
Hairspray began on Broadway in August 2002. The set was designed by David Rockwell and clearly portrayed the typical 1960s American town because the musical was nominated for outstanding set design for a drama desk award, an olivier award and a tony award.
This picture shows the vibrant costumes used in Hairspray. The show was also nominated for many costume design awards as the costumes really show the vibrant fashions and hairstyles of America at the time. The musical also focuses on the racism at the time. All these aspects link in to give a clear picture of the small, American town of Baltimore.