Use the form below to search for The Lion King tickets on your desired date. Dates from 24 September 1999, Tues-Sat 19:30. Wed,Sat Mats 14:30. Sun Mat 14:30
Synopsis
Based on the 1994 Disney animated film, The Lion King musical is a Tony and Olivier Award winning Broadway and West End musical. The Lion King show has songs by Elton John and lyrics by Tim Rice along with the musical score created by Hans Zimmer with choral arrangements by Lebo M. The show is directed by Julie Taymor.
Set against the majesty of the Serengeti Plains and to the evocative rhythms of Africa, Lion King musical tells the story of the young lion Prince Simba. When he is born his evil uncle Scar is pushed back to second in line to the throne. Scar plots to kill both Simba and his father, King Mufasa, and proclaim himself King. Simba survives, but is led to believe that his father died because of him and he decides to flee the kingdom.
A spectacular visual feast, this adaptation transports audiences to a dazzling world that explodes with glorious colours, stunning effects and enchanting music with Lion King songs including Circle of Life, Hakuna Matata, Shadowland, Can You Feel the Love Tonight and He Lives in You.
On Broadway the show premiered in 1997 and The Lion King London theatre is the Lyceum Theatre where it opened in 1999 and still plays today.
So for a great evening out book advance official Lion King tickets through Whatsonstage.com today!
Dates: Opens 19 October 1999. Tues-Sat 19:30. Wed,Sat Mats 14:30. Sun Mat 14:30 29 April 2012 14:30 - Open Captioned (STAGETEXT) 07 September 2012 19:30 - Open Captioned (STAGETEXT)
After 12 years, The Lion King is still playing to packed houses and the Disney juggernaut shows no signs of slowing down. It has its detractors, but as West End family entertainment goes it’s still very hard to beat.
My problems with it have always centred on the book. It feels as if the producers got so sidetracked with the game-changing masks, costumes and sets that they completely forgot to commission an original script, so asked an intern to transcribe the film instead. Familiar gags proliferate - “getting your lions crossed”, “put your behind in your past” etc - and are delivered with an almost palpable weariness.
Another of my bugbears - the dreadful aerial dance sequence in “Can You Feel the Love Tonight” - has now been shelved, as has Zazu’s lame “Morning Report” song in the first act. These cuts are welcome, and mean the (largely young) audience can now leave the Lyceum before 10.30pm.
Julie Taymor's star may have dimmed recently after the chaos of Spider-Man, but her landmark production still boasts the finest mise-en-scène in the West End, and music to make the spine tingle. Most of the stand-out numbers, including “One by One”, “Shadowland” and “Endless Night”, were written specially for the stage, and express most fully the show’s African roots.
The current cast - led by Shaun Escoffery (Mufasa), George Asprey (Scar), Andile Gumbi (Simba) and Ava Brennan (Nala) - is the strongest I’ve seen, and the production feels well maintained and as fresh as it can be after more than a decade.
Last night’s performance - the show’s 5000th - ended with a curtain call appearance from lyricist Tim Rice (no sign of Elton though), and more confetti than an Olympics opening ceremony. Debates about the merits of long-running shows will continue, but it’s difficult to argue with a blockbuster that continues to prove that big budgets and high artistry, unlike lions and hyenas, can coexist peacefully.
- Theo Bosanquet
Note: The following review dates from October 1999, and this production's premiere at the Lyceum
If Florenz Ziegfeld teamed up with PT Barnum, he couldn't have created a more eye-popping opening than The Lion King's "Circle of Life" number. Pride Rock spirals majestically up from centre stage with Rafiki holding the young cub aloft, while bounding antelopes, fluttering storks, stilt-legged giraffes, and even an 11-foot elephant, all assemble to pay homage.
While it takes Disney bucks to mount extravaganzas like this - allegedly around £6.5 million - much credit has to go to director Julie Taymor, for her remarkable vision. This involves taking the tale back to its African roots to re-invent the look, acting and music of the entire production.
Never has the Dark Continent seemed so colourful and vibrant. Richard Hudson's designs utilise tribal motifs (causing Paul Baker's Zazu to jest that the drapes 'look like Ikea shower curtains'), savannah grasses and palm fronds engage in Garth Fagan's balletic routines, and rainbow-hued singers dangle birds of paradise from 30-foot poles.
Tim Rice and Elton John's Academy award-winning music and lyrics, too, have been augmented by exotic new material by Lebo M, Mark Mancina, Jay Rifkin and Hans Zimmer. This adds up to a kaleidoscope of musical styles, from kiddie-pop ('I Just Can't Wait To Be King') to the African-influenced ('Shadowland'). Appealing though this trans-cultural mix is, it doesn't seem to hang together quite as well as Ashman and Menken's superior score for Beauty and the Beast.
Roger Allers and Irene Mecchi's book, with its panto-quality gags and prodigal son storyline, is probably the least changed element of the show, staying close to the original screenplay. This follows Simba's exile after his father Mufasa's (Cornell John) death, and triumphant return to defeat Scar and reclaim his role as King of the Jungle.
Roger Wright as the grown-up Simba is sleek and muscular, though not particularly powerful on the vocal front . Simon Gregor's deftly manipulated Timon puppet and Martyn Ellis's flatulent Pumbaa are an engaging comic duo. But Rob Edwards's limp-pawed Scar is a let-down, being too camp to be truly menacing.
Still, you don't go to this one to marvel at the acting any more than you jump on a Disney theme park ride just to enjoy the engineering. It's the sum of the parts that count here, and The Lion King successfully marries visuals, music and story to create as breathtaking a spectacle as you're likely to see in a West End theatre.
Can't believe how bad this show was.....saw it years ago and it was very good, now however it is basically a very poor panto with little or no care given to its upkeep. So so expensive...cost over 250 pounds for three of us....what a total waste...first five minutes is good, after that, it's DIRE....not even entertaining for children! - Leanne, London
31 Dec 11
would be very good but cast seemed tired and bored. seemed like a copy of a copy of a copy... - bj
20 Jun 10
The opening of this show is spectacular. The staging and effects are excellent but for me this show really did not have any real substance or emotion to it. Some scenes were to long and drawn out. I must say I came away disapointed after loving the film version. - Anthony E Ball
*meant to say you cant expect someone under 10 to perform to the same standard as someone twice their age in the previous post! Not that they *can*! - K8m
05 May 08
The staging of this musical is inventive yet also quite abstract and suggestive, almost as if it had been made up for a dance piece rather than a full blown musical.
I enjoyed it to a certain point. The second half is better than the first in my opinion. The reason for this is that I didnt think the child actor playing the major role of 'young simba' was up to much. His voice wasnt very strong and his acting really not up to scratch. However, I appreciate that when you're under 10 you can be expected to perform in the same was as someone twice your age but I just felt this made the first act rather mechanical and clunky. However the actress playing young nala was full of life and very enjoyable to watch, I think her name was "Natalie Kasanga"
Also another big problem for me is that they have lifted a lot of the dailogue directly from the film which made the whole thing feel quite unnatural and broke up the pace.
Brown Lindiwe Mkhize was a joy to watch as Rafiki, she had an outstanding voice and was full of energy. She also brought something original to the character so it wasn't just a carbon copy of the cartoon. Even though she wasn't in it a lot, whenever she came onstage all the audience really enjoyed her performance (and she got the biggest applause at the end!)
The second act was better, with the adult Nala and Simba. Andile Gumbi (adult simba) and Gloria Onitiri (adult nala) didnt have the strongest voices but they were both good dancers and managest to just about cope with the stilted dailoge they had been given!
Timone and Pumba were definately a fave of the audience - they looked and sounded like the characters in the film but I think this was a good rather than a bad thing. They had energy, kept the pace and brought lots of comedy to the show.
At times this felt like a glorified pantomime. I would definately recomend it for the kids but perhaps not for someone looking for a more sophisticated musical. One last thing is that this company has some very good dancers, and the numbers where they were the main focus were a joy to watch. (the opening scene is also pretty spectacular!)
- K8m
05 May 08
Set, people, music. All brilliant, exciting, colourful and a brilliant night out. - 195.62.201.138)
20 Oct 06
Saw the Lion King on 3rd May, which I think was a new cast. I had seen the show 2 times previously, and felt that now this show is beginning to show signs of tiredness. On the plus side, this show has spectacle like no other I've seen-the sets and costumes are frequently breathtaking and the production clearly costs a fortune to mount-and you can see every penny on the stage. On the downside, the singing is very patchy-in fact last night only the character of the witchdoctor stood out as a good singer. The acting is also not the best-the role of Scar seemed to be played like a camp Shakespearean actor rather than a real villain-which I felt lessened the emotional impact of the plot. Indeed, I felt the show had really lost its emotional heart-at times it felt over-rehearsed and "stagey". There were a number of technical things that went wrong-ropes appearing across the stage at the wrong time, microphones not working properly,backstage crew being visible when they shouldn't be...all signs of a production that has lost its tightness. It is still a jawdropping show..but for me it has lost its heart. - 212.135.157.226)
04 May 06
The Lion King is, unfortunatly, a big diappointment. The problem is that the best moment in the show is at the very beginning, and after the 'Circle of Life' has finished the show never ever lives up to the opening. The familiar songs from the film are generally transferred very well, but the additional material is nowhere near the standard.
The show is much more of an event than anything else, and is very much style over content. It's worth going for the experience (and the 'Cicle of Life' number which is wonderful), and the staging is unmatched in its originally.
However its pales into mediorcrity when compared to Disney's other mega show in the west end - Mary Poppins. Too many times we get 'panto' moments which are often cringeworthy for a top west end musical. The african music added to the film score, is bland, and you sometimes wonder why some of the dance scene's were added in as they do nothing to move the story on.
That said the moments of the show where most of the ensemble are present for the big numbers are fantastic, and don't fail to wow anyone.
Overall it is worth going to once, but there are much better shows in the west end - both for adults and children.
- 193.37.182.1)
27 Nov 05
so cool........sat there with goodebumps all the way through music is beautifull and actress alexia facey put a smile on my face and a shiver down my spine with that tremendous voice. definetly one of the best singer around!.......well done everyone
p.s the young nala had a cute look and a sweet voice! sherelle was the nala - 195.8.175.50)
Re-built after a long period dark re-opened during 1996. This site has had a place of entertainment since 1765 but it started doing plays in 1809 when the Drury Lane company moved there (their own building having burned down). The Lyceum was rebuilt in 1812 by Beazley and burned down in 1830 (16th February). Reopened in 1834 as the Royal Lyceum and English Opera House, this building also by Beazley. Linked with Henry Irving from 1871. Scheduled for demolition in 1939, but saved by the outbreak of war. Became a dance hall in 1945. Society of London Theatre member.
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