Received a new Hallmark (click on the link to find a short video of it "in action") ornament this year:


Combining Hamlet, Bible stories of Joseph and Moses, and their own Bambi (1942), The Lion King (1994) was at the time of its release the culmination of the Disney animation team's fifty-plus years of experience and hard work.

I was fortunate enough to see the Broadway production back in 1999. Anyone who has seen it knows how during the opening number ("Circle of Life"), every square inch of the theater is used - every aisle, every balcony - thereby knocking down that "fourth wall," and intermingling audience with performers.
The result was a genuinely moving and transcendent moment I shall not soon forget. Obviously, the Broadway production was competing with and trying to accomplish what the animated film was able to achieve.




Phil Hartman as Sinatra in the Saturday Night Live parody of the Duets album (here's the transcript):



From 1969 on to the end, except for parts of Abbey Road, it was very rare to see or hear The Beatles as they might have been in Hamburg or Liverpool (with the addition of Billy Preston on organ) - rocking like no other band could:
How cool would it have been to be walking around the financial district of London on that cold, winter day (January 30, 1969)?! London swings - one last time.
The echo must have been tremendous. I love how together they seem (they were supposed to be "getting back" after all) and the way Ringo cracks up after John flubs that line. George's green pants are pretty gear, too.

