The Lessons of 'The Lion King' | The Circle of Life | Parents and Children | Anthropomorphism | Journeys

"ANTHROPO-what?"
Animal Stories and Folklore

'The Lion King' continues a tradition of storytelling that is centuries old: anthropomorphism, or giving animals human speech and feelings. In her book Animal Land: The Creatures of Children’s Fiction (William Morrow & Company, NY,1975), Margaret Blount writes, "Talking animals seem to be as old as man; and folklore tales read like Man’s remotest dreams." Every culture has its own animal stories. When we tell stories about animals acting like humans, we are better able to see ourselves in the Circle of Life.

'The Lion King' is very much in the great Disney tradition of using allegories with animals for storytelling purposes. In the early days, Walt adapted many of Aesop’s fables for animation and used animal characters like Mickey and Donald to tell his stories. Later Bambi, Lady and the Tramp and One Hundred and One Dalmations... further explored the approach of telling stories about animals in human terms and with strong moral themes."
Roy E. Disney, Vice Chairman of the Walt Disney Company and head of Feature Animation.

 

Photographs of Original London Company by Catherine Ashmore. Photographs of Original Broadway Company by Joan Marcus
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