News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

STAGE TUBE: Trailer Released for Beauty and the Beast Diamond Edition DVD

By: Jun. 13, 2010
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.



The trailer has been released for the two disk limited time only edition of "Beauty and the Beast" which will be out on November 23, 2010. The cover of the DVD has also been released. The Blu-ray high-definition disk will be released on October 5, 2010.

The new DVD edition will include a number of bonus features including restored film, three versions of the film, Disney sing-along mode, audio commentary, deleted scenes, and Beyond Beauty: The Untold Stories Behind Making Beauty and the Beast. The special features also includes Broadway Beginnings with up close and personal celebrity interviews with Nick Jonas, Donny Osmond, Toni Braxton and others who have starred in the Broadway production.

The DVD will also contain family games like the Enchanted Castle as well as a music video and all of the classic DVD features.

The first of only two animated films ever to be nominated for an Academy Award® for Best Picture (the second is 2009's Up), Beauty and the Beast earned six Academy Award® nominations and won two Oscars® in 1992 for Best Original Song ("Beauty and the Beast") and Best Original Score.

Unavailable in any form since 2003, Beauty and the Beast will be released from the Disney vault for a limited time only, arriving on a Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack (2 Blu-ray Discs + DVD) October 5, followed seven weeks later with the release of a 2-Disc standard definition DVD on November 23.

The Beauty and the Beast Blu-ray(TM) + DVD Combo Pack has a U.S. suggested retail price of $39.99 and the 2-Disc DVD set has a U.S. suggested retail price of $29.99.

Set in and around a quaint French village during the late 18th century, Beauty and the Beast follows the fantastic adventures of Belle, a bright and beautiful young woman who finds escape from her ordinary life, and the advances of a boorish suitor, Gaston, by reading books. Meanwhile, off in a castle in the distance, a cruel young prince is cast under the spell of an enchantress who turns him into a tormented beast, while transforming his servants into animated household objects. In order to remove the curse, the Beast must discover a true love who will return his affection before the last petal falls from an enchanted rose. When Belle's inventor father stumbles upon the Beast's castle and is taken prisoner, Belle comes to the rescue and agrees to take her father's place. With the help of the castle's enchanted staff, she sees beneath the Beast's exterior and discovers the heart and soul of a human prince.

Beauty and the Beast received two Academy Awards® for music in 1992, three Golden Globes® for Best Motion Picture, Best Original Score and Best Original Song in 1992, and two Grammy Awards in 1993. Listed as number seven on the American Film Institute's Top 100 Animated Films, Beauty and the Beast helped define Disney animation for a new generation as the second film in the "Disney Animation Renaissance" (1989-1999) which launched with The Little Mermaid and revitalized animated features by captivating mature audiences while still delighting young viewers.

Beauty and the Beast features a cast of top vocal talent. Veteran stage actress and singer Paige O'Hara is the voice of Belle, one of Disney's most beloved and independent heroines, and Robby Benson (TV's "American Dreams") delivers a powerful portrayal of the Beast. Three-time Oscar®-nominated screen star (The Manchurian Candidate in 1963, The Picture of DorIan Grey in 1946, and Gaslight in 1945) and six-time Golden Globe® award winner (TV's "Murder, She Wrote" in 1992, 1990, 1987 and 1985, The Manchurian Candidate in 1963, and The Picture of DorIan Grey in 1946), Angela Lansbury gives a bubbly performance as Mrs. Potts. The late Jerry Orbach (TV's "Law and Order," "House of Mouse") shines as the voice of Lumiere, the passionate candelabra, and David Ogden-Stiers (TV's "M*A*S*H," Lilo & Stitch) is Cogsworth, the tightly-wound mantel clock who functions as the head of the household.

Beauty and the Beast was also the first Disney animated film to inspire a Broadway stage production by the same name. Highlighting the film's music by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman, seven new songs were written for the stage musical. Beauty... was nominated for nine Tony Awards in 1994 and ran on Broadway for 5,464 performances until 2007, becoming Broadway's sixth-longest running production in history.

 

 




Videos