Genie points to the audience surrounded by a group of colorfully dressed dancers. The dancers show off desserts from beneath golden cloches

Bringing Aladdin to the Stage

This article originally ran in Disney twenty-three, a publication of D23: The Official Disney Fan Club.

Aladdin stands proudly, a bag slung over his shoulder

Adi Roy as Aladdin in the North American Tour of Disney’s Aladdin. Photo by Deen van Meer

Early in the evolution of Aladdin, composer Alan Menken, book writer and lyricist Chad Beguelin and director/choreographer Casey Nicholaw got together to write a brand new song for the stage musical – a unique collaboration that could only happen on Broadway. “We needed to write a new song for the Genie, [for] when he’s going to free Aladdin from the dungeon in Act II. And we wrote this song called ‘Somebody’s Got Your Back.’ It was just one of these old-fashioned theatre mo­ments where you lock three people in a room. I run over to the piano and try an idea; Casey gets up and gets kind of a movement idea; and Chad shouts out lyric ideas… and within a half an hour, we had the beginning of this song. And we’re very proud of it. The best part of the process is always the initial creativity, the initial writing — and that was a great moment.”

It’s hard to imagine that the late, great lyricist How­ard Ashman wouldn’t be ridiculously pleased with the success of his Disney-based collaborations with longtime songwriting partner Alan Menken. The duo’s iconic scores for the animated films The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast were given continued life as Broadway musicals, seen by millions all over the country and the world. But what about the pair’s last Disney project — 1992’s Aladdin? Die-hard fans know Alan and Howard had written 11 songs for the film, only to have most of them cut from early drafts of the screenplay; production was later marred by How­ard’s woefully early passing from AIDS-related complications in 1991. Did any of those original songs still exist? Could a reimagined Aladdin ever make it to Broadway? The answer, thankfully, was “yes” — and the final product joins several of How­ard Ashman’s original ideas for the film with brand-new, wholly theatrical notions from the musical’s blue-chip creative team.

Genie points to the audience surrounded by a group of colorfully dressed dancers. The dancers show off desserts from beneath golden cloches

Marcus M. Martin and Company of the North American Tour of Disney’s Aladdin. Photo by Deen van Meer

It all started when Tony-nom­inated lyricist Chad Beguelin (The Prom, The Wedding Singer, Elf) was asked to help put together a draft of a stage version of Aladdin. When Menken saw Beguelin’s initial draft, he realized the time was right to resurrect the film’s little-heard deleted songs and debut them to a new generation. Begue­lin explains: “The task was to create Aladdin ‘the new stage musical,’ but also integrate these lost songs — which are really won­derful. It was like putting together a musical puzzle.” While a host of new or previously-unheard songs take flight, fans can expect all their favorites — in­cluding the Menken/Tim Rice Oscar®-winner “A Whole New World” and a totally swingin’ version of “Friend Like Me.”

Bringing Aladdin to Broadway was a memo­rable experience, even for stage adaptation-maestro Menken. “Coming to the show was like opening up, in a sense, a treasure trove — or a ‘Cave of Wonders,’ if you will — of material that was intended for the animated movie,” he says. Ultimately, Casey says audiences hail the “new” Menk­en/Ashman tunes and the new Menken/Be­guelin songs and fully embrace this fresh, joyful take on a classic. “It’s about keeping all the stuff that everyone loves from the movie and in order to get it on stage, giving it a musical-comedy heart.”

DETAILS
Aladdin
June 13-18, 2023 • Buell Theatre
Tickets