Rating: G
Genre:
Children's/Family
Release Date: 11/14/2000
SubTitles: English
Dubbed: English
Sound: DD5.1
Run Time: 88 Minutes
Flags: Suitable for Children
Distributor/Studio: Walt Disney Video
Seen on
ABC's
Wonderful World of Disney, this $12-million production is the only
musical Rodgers and Hammerstein wrote for television. The
CBS-TV original, with 21-year-old
Julie Andrews in the title role and
Edie Adams as the
Fairy Godmother, played on live television March 31, 1957 to TV's largest audience ever to that date (107-million viewers). That historic production, captured on kinescope, can still be seen today on library monitors at the Museum of Television & Radio in New York and Los Angeles.
Hammerstein died in 1960 and did not get to see 18-year-old
Lesley Ann Warren as
Cinderella in the February 22, 1965 restaged production, repeated annually on
CBS until 1977 and later made available on videotape from
CBS/
Fox Video and
Facets Multimedia. Added to the 1965 show was
"Loneliness of Evening", a song actually written for
South Pacific but cut before the Broadway opening.
Running a half-hour longer, this third interpretation premiered November 2, 1997. Filmed over a 28-day period, it stars
Brandy Norwood as
Cinderella and
Whitney Houston as the
Fairy Godmother, with
Bernadette Peters as the Stepmother,
Whoopi Goldberg as the Queen (wearing $60 million worth of borrowed
Harry Winston jewelry),
Paolo Montalban as the Prince, and
Jason Alexander as the Prince's steward, Lionel. Scripter
Robert L. Freedman provided a rewrite of the original
Oscar Hammerstein book, and three other
Richard Rodgers songs were added to the existing score:
"There's Music in You" (from the 1953 movie
musical Main Street to Broadway),
"The Sweetest Sounds" (a
Brandy/
Montalban duet), and
"Falling in Love with Love". Originally set in motion as a follow-up to the highly successful TV
Gypsy (1993) with
Bette Midler, this 1997 multicultural version (sometimes referred to as the "rainbow
Cinderella") was years in the making, since it was initiated in 1994 when
Houston joined executive producers
Craig Zadan and
Neil Meron (the team responsible for the TV
Gypsy).
~ Bhob Stewart, All Movie Guide