Showing posts with label disney channel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label disney channel. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Altar Boyz Cast Will Visit "Sprites"

NEW YORK (Playbill) – The cast of the hit Off-Broadway musical Altar Boyz will make a cameo appearance on the May 19 broadcast of "Johnny and the Sprites," which stars Avenue Q Tony nominee and current Beauty and the Beast actor John Tartaglia. The episode is titled "Basil's Band" and will air at 11 AM ET on the Disney Channel. The upcoming program is described in this manner: "Basil discovers something about making promises – and keeping them – when he joins a band and forgets about all of his friends." The original song "That's What Friends Do" – penned by Gary Adler and Michael Patrick Walker – will be heard during the episode. Adler and Walker also wrote the score for Altar Boyz. "Johnny and the Sprites" – which teaches children "about magic in the world around them" – airs Saturdays on the Disney Channel. Tony winner Sutton Foster was a previous guest on the show, which features Avenue Q's Natalie Venetia Belcon in a recurring role as Johnny's next-door neighbor. John Tartaglia made his Broadway debut in Avenue Q. He currently plays Lumiere in Broadway's Beauty and the Beast.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Disneyland Paris 15th anniversary celebration

Disneyland Paris turns 15 this year and Disney is putting on quite a celebration. I mean, how can you beat Andie MacDowell as your Master of Ceremonies? Is there anyone more deserving than one of the co-stars of Hudson Hawk? I remember her first film role well, so eloquently portraying the role of Jane in Tarzan: The Legend of Greystoke, mainly because her voice was entirely dubbed over by Glenn Close. Now that's acting!


Keeping with ridiculous marketing choices, I give you the best caption of a photo...ever.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Disney Movie Skips to Another Record

My 18 month old daughter watches a lot of the Disney Channel. Her tv usually stays there since I watch the HD big screen in the next room. I happened to flip on her little tv during her nap and caught the premiere of Jump In. I wasn't sure what I was watching, i.e. I didn't know it was a new movie/premiere. I just recognized the kid from High School Musical and thought "What is my company doing now?" Turns out, the pieces I caught were pretty well put together. I wasn't sure exactly how they justified the over-the-top dance routine at the end of the jump rope competition, but the double-dutch patrons didn't seem to flinch at all, so I guess it's all part of the pseudo-musical style.

It looks like Disney is locked in on their target demo for the moment. I'll take it, especially since the stock is up near a 52-week high these days.

(Multichannel News) – High School Musical? That’s so yesterday for Disney Channel viewers. The spec-tacle of the moment is Jump In. That fast-paced, high-stepping movie involving a Double Dutch rope-skipping competition is now Disney’s most-watched telefilm ever, drawing a record 8.2 million viewers in its Jan. 12 debut. That beats last year’s debut at this time of the multimedia phenomenon High School Musical by a half-million viewers. Musical drew a then-record audience of 7.7 million. That, in turn, leads to the question of the moment: Just how hot is Disney with young viewers? The Jan. 20, 2006 premiere of High School Musical is now only the fourth-most watched film on the network in the past year. Besides Jump In!, it trails last August’s girl-powered musical Cheetah Girls 2 (8.1 million viewers) and this past October’s Return to Halloweentown (7.8 million), the fourth installment of the fright-fest franchise. If that wasn’t enough, the soundtrack of Jump In! debuted at number five on the Jan. 10 Billboard Music Charts, with 48,840 copies sold. By comparison, the High School Musical soundtrack took seven weeks to break the top five, on its way to No. 1. It eventually finished as the country’s top-selling album last year, with more than 2 million units sold. “We’ve gone from strength to strength,” said Disney Channel Worldwide president of entertainment Gary Marsh. “We all thought High School Musical was the top of the ladder, but it was only a bridge to the next level,” he said. Marsh attributed Jump In!’s success to the network’s now tried-and-true game plan: Blitz kids with previews of the movie on both the channel and on disney-channel.com weeks prior to its premiere to build up anticipation. Then, sit back and let tweens and their parents tune into the movie’s debut in record numbers. Given the incredible success of Jump In!, you’d figure Disney has finally reached its ratings pinnacle, right? Not necessarily, says Marsh. “The answer is to keep making great movies that inspire kids with positive messages and positive music, and if we keep doing that, there is no limit,” he said. Marsh can hedge his bets on how high is up for its original movies because he knows he has one major wild card left in his hand: the sequel to High School Musical is scheduled for August.