by Randy GenerPublished on BroadwayNow.comApril 1999 A powerhouse lineup of personalities from the worlds of Broadway, Hollywood, politics, sports, media and music will descend Monday, May 3 on Broadway’s Kit Kat Club, 124 West 43rd Street, for an American Red Cross benefit to aid the victims of the Kosovo war. Kirk Douglas, Keith Richards, Art’s George
Long Live the Kings
by Kathy HendersonPublished in InTheater magazineFebruary 8, 1999 (click cover to read)
A Jungle Out There
by Michael Grossberg, Theater CriticPublished in The Columbus Dispatch (Columbus, OH)March 26, 1998 NEW YORK — Masks, puppets, mime, dance and junglelike behavior make an animated film come to African life in The Lion King, the hottest musical on Broadway. “We don’t just become animals onstage,” Jason Raize (Simba) said during the recent New York
Raize of Light
by Patrick PachecoPublished in InTheater magazineJanuary 23, 1998 (click cover to read)
A Lion’s Share
by Sheryl KahnPublished in InTheater magazineNovember 21, 1997 Click to read
The Two Kings of Pride Rock: Jason Raize and Samuel E. Wright
by Marc WarrenPublished in Afro-American Newspaper (Baltimore, MD, and Washington, DC)Date Unknown NEW YORK – It’s a typical Wednesday matinee for all but two cast members of Disney’s “The Lion King.” Not only will actors Jason Raize and Samuel E. Wright be unable to perform their weekly routine of winding down after a somewhat demanding
Heart of a Lion
Associated PressAs published in the Telegraph Herald (Dubuque, IA)November 13, 1997 AP photo of Scott Irby-Ranniar and Jason, November 13, 1997 Animation in Action: Disney’s ‘The Lion King’ goes to Broadway NEW YORK (AP) – “The Lion King” might find its look in the stage wizardry of director-designer Julie Taymor, but its heart and humanity