Lion King will roar back to city stage next year
DISNEY’S The Lion King will return to Bristol Hippodrome next summer, it has been announced.
The production returns to the city for an unprecedented third time after opening the tour to critical acclaim at the Hippodrome in 2019 and returning for a sold-out run in March this year.
The internationally acclaimed production will return for six weeks from Thursday, May 18 to Saturday, July 1.
Priority tickets will be available from 11am on Tuesday, November 22. The general sale will begin at 10am on Friday, November 25.
Ben Phillips, theatre director at The Bristol Hippodrome said: “We are delighted to have Disney’s The Lion King back in Bristol. Its impressive reign as one of the longest-running musicals in the world just highlights how loved it is and I’m sure the people of Bristol will be delighted to see it back in their hometown once again.”
The story of The Lion King leaps into life using spectacular masks, puppets and costumes to tell the story of Simba’s epic adventures, as he struggles with the responsibilities of adulthood and becoming king.
Julie Taymor’s internationally celebrated stage adaptation of The Lion King opened on Broadway in 1997 and 25 global productions in nine different languages have been created since then (English, Japanese, German, Korean, French, Dutch, Spanish, Mandarin and Portuguese).
The previous tour of The Lion King broke attendance records across the nation.
Since the UK premiere in 1999, The Lion King London has entertained more than 16 million theatregoers and is the sixth longest-running West End musical of all time.
The stunning artistry of the production is the work of a team of designers which drew on diverse cultural influences to recreate the rich colours and vast expanses of the African savanna in this inspiring reinvention of one of the most successful animated feature films of all time.
Julie Taymor, one of the world’s most innovative directors, brought a vast array of disciplines to The Lion King.
The Broadway show’s full creative team, which won five Tony
Awards for its work on The Lion King reunited in 1999 to recreate the show in London. Julie Taymor and Michael Curry created hundreds of masks and puppets.
The original score from the animated film was expanded for the stage and now features 15 musical numbers. As well as writing completely new songs, South African composer Lebo M created an evocative blend of African rhythms and chorales, with additional material by Julie Taymor and Mark Mancina.
Elton John and Tim Rice have added three new numbers to the five that they wrote for the awardwinning score of the animated film. The resulting sound of The Lion King is a fusion of Western popular music and the distinctive sounds and rhythms of Africa, including the Academy Awardwinning Can You Feel The Love Tonight and the haunting Shadowland.