How Disney's Mufasa Has Changed Broadway's The Lion King | 半岛体育

半岛体育

Special Features How Disney's Mufasa Has Changed Broadway's The Lion King

L. Steven Taylor has played Mufasa for almost 20 years. Stephen Carlile has played Scar for eight. They react to the new prequel movie.

L. Steven Taylor and Stephen Carlile at a screening of Mufasa Disney Theatrical

The circle of life is getting bigger! Disney officially released Mufasa, a new Lion King prequel film digging into the origin stories of Mufasa and Scar, in movie theatres December 20.

Along with some infectious new songs from Hamilton writer Lin-Manuel Miranda, the movie from director Barry Jenkins adds an interesting new backstory for the iconic characters. 

The next section contains slight spoilers for Mufasa.

It is newly revealing that Mufasa and Scar are spiritual brothers rather than blood relatives, and that their nature by the time we meet them in The Lion King was not so much innate as it was the result of a pretty dramatic, and by some turns traumatic, childhood and adolescence. Both, it turns out, end up orphaned under tragic circumstances鈥攂ut how they process and work through that trauma makes all the difference as to who ends up a loner villain and who becomes king of the Pride Lands.

Mufasa has several new plot points to reveal: Scar is not the name that was on his lion birth certificate, part of the bad blood between the two characters revolves around a painful love triangle, and, perhaps most notably, The Lion King as a stage musical exists within the Lion King cinematic universe (one hopes those animals are all getting payouts for their life rights!).

But of course, The Lion King isn鈥檛 just a cinematic universe. 半岛体育 recently had the chance to catch the new film alongside longtime Lion King Broadway stars L. Steven Taylor (who will celebrate his 20th year as Mufasa in 2025) and Stephen Carlile (who'se played Scar for eight years.). Afterwards, the two veterans broke down their reactions to the new movie and how it might affect their performances in the stage show (currently in its 27th year at the Minskoff Theatre).

The below conversation has been edited for clarity and length.

L. Steven Taylor

Let鈥檚 start by talking about The Lion King separate from Mufasa. We don鈥檛 learn a ton of backstory about Mufasa and Scar in the original movie or the stage show. Have you two invented your own?

L. Steven Taylor: We鈥檝e sourced from the animated feature and growing up with that, and then the text of the show. It鈥檚 interesting, because like you say, we never really drop into what the actual history is between them. It鈥檚 just bad blood. Mufasa is the type, or at least I have him this way in my brain, that he tries to find the good in everybody. He knows that there鈥檚 good in Scar, and he鈥檚 frustrated that he can鈥檛 pull it out. That鈥檚 my backstory.

Stephen Carlile: I have a line in the show, that 鈥淣obody loved me鈥攖here鈥檚 the rub鈥攏ot even as a cub.鈥� I always think of the mother, our mother, who would always give everything to him. I have this thing where she scratched me when I tried to eat Mufasa鈥檚 food, and that鈥檚 why it gets tough for me in 鈥淭he Madness of King Scar.鈥� For me, there was always that mother thing going on.

Do you view Scar as an innately bad character, or is that a judgement you stay away from as an actor?

Carlile: The villain would never think of themselves as the villain. It鈥檚 always everyone else鈥檚 fault. You justify every single thing that you do, and there鈥檚 always a reason why you know it鈥檚 everybody else鈥檚 fault. I focus on the character, not on his badness. I focus on what he wants. Ultimately, Scar wants revenge. He wants to be king, and he wants to do good for the world鈥攊t would be much better under his guidance. It wouldn鈥檛 be, but he thinks it would be.

What do you think makes him become a villain, at least in the context of this story?

Carlile: Everything about him is just so ghastly. Every joint and bone hurts him鈥攈e鈥檚 oozing with pain. He doesn鈥檛 get what he wants, and I think that makes him extremely grouchy. And there鈥檚 a snowball effect. He doesn鈥檛 get one thing, doesn鈥檛 get another, doesn鈥檛 get the girl, his mother hates him鈥攁nd so he just feels really out of touch.

Okay, and now Mufasa. What did we think?

Taylor: I really enjoyed it! People are so protective of the musical and the animated movie, so I think it鈥檚 a really tricky and big undertaking to add to the canon while still honoring that. But I think this movie does such a great job. It鈥檚 offering some really different perspectives, adding layers to the relationship between the two brothers growing up. I think people are going to find it interesting to see these characters in this new light. And it鈥檚 stunning to look at, too.

On stage, Mufasa just feels like this wise, all-knowing sage almost. I found it so cool the way this movie makes sure we know he wasn鈥檛 just born that way, that that quality is the result of a hard life.

Taylor: Something that really stuck out for me was the lack of nurturing Scar got because of who he was around, versus Mufasa. Both of these characters, at least in how they鈥檙e portrayed in this movie, had the capacity for greatness. Mufasa鈥檚 was just nurtured. We all start with the same dream, that we鈥檙e going to do great things. It鈥檚 who鈥檚 around you to nurture it. I think if Mufasa had gone unnurtured, he would have ended up somewhere closer to who Scar is.

Yeah, it鈥檚 well plotted to me that they made it so we have these two characters with actually quite similar baggage, with one choosing to process that and become a great leader as a result and the other descending into anger and bitterness.

Carlile: I think there鈥檚 something in you, a chemical imbalance that Scar probably has. I think that Scar, even if he was shown the nurturing, might not have had the capacity to accept it.

Taylor: And that plays into what my Mufasa sees in Scar in a cool way, too.

Speaking of which, I think the big question becomes if the plot of this movie is going to change up either of your performances in the stage show.

Taylor: Oh, it immediately has me thinking how to add this backstory into the show.

Carlile: It鈥檚 going to change everything for us. I think when we first meet each other in the beginning, I鈥檓 going to have this whole film in my brain. And my calling for Sarabi at the end is going to have a lot more weight. It might be five minutes longer. I already play that like I鈥檝e always loved her, so this is just reinforcing that.

Stephen Carlile Marc J. Franklin

Oh wow, so you were actually ahead of that 鈥渘ew鈥� bit of backstory before this movie?

Carlile: Yeah. It just made sense for me. In those bad blood situations, there鈥檚 almost always a woman involved.

Taylor: I think this movie is going to give me license to add another layer of softness towards you. When we meet these characters, they鈥檙e fully grown, so the history between them has kind of stacked up. But this has reminded me to give a layer of softness, because at the end of the day, Mufasa knows that Scar is not inherently evil. He makes bad choices. I like the idea of Mufasa and Scar coming from the same place in life, that they鈥檙e not actually brothers but both orphans. I like the hierarchy of coming from that lineage, but Simba being next in line, which makes Mufasa hate Simba.

Another interesting point of divergence between the two characters to me was how Mufasa is forced to hang around the women of the pride. That seems like a pointed choice that maybe explains why Mufasa has a different response to what happens to him than Scar does.

Taylor: That really resonated with me. In real life, I was raised by my grandmother and my aunt. I think that female influence is a huge part of what makes Mufasa a great leader, having access to that softness. And to knowing what is needed.

Carlile: I鈥檝e always thought the world should be run by women.

Taylor: In this film, you hear Mufasa鈥檚 foster mom tell him for the first time that "They live in you" message. In our show, Mufasa tells Simba that came from his father. But I really love that it comes from the mother in this movie. I love that it becomes our ancestors are watching over us as opposed to the great kings of the past, because I think that alludes to even Simba鈥檚 daughter [shown in Mufasa], and how she will go on to be the next leader of the pride.

We also learn a lot more about Sarabi in this movie. In the original film and stage show, I feel like we don鈥檛 learn a lot about who she is. But in Mufasa, it鈥檚 kind of cool seeing how strong she is, how much of her relationship with Mufasa is because they are equals in many ways.

Taylor: The stage show focuses more on Nala, but it鈥檚 that same lineage. Nala is the warrior queen, like we get to see Sarabi be in this film. In the stage show, that鈥檚 something that Nala got from the strong women around her.

So obviously, no matter what new backstory you two have in your minds, the text of The Lion King won鈥檛 be changing. What is the use for you as actors to have backstories like that, even if the audience doesn鈥檛 necessarily get all of the specifics of them?

Carlile: It gives it weight. We鈥檝e all had backgrounds in our mind, but this is going to be something different. It gives the performance weight, something behind the eyes that you鈥檙e visualizing. It makes the character whole, the performer whole.

Taylor: I don鈥檛 think this show would have survived for 27 years without evolving. And I think the reason it鈥檚 been able to evolve is because people continue to come in and find new things about the show. I鈥檝e been with the show for almost 20 years, and I definitely would not have had that amount of longevity if it weren鈥檛 for other people giving me different ideas and different takes on this character. This is going to add to the next incarnation of how we think about these roles. And people that see this film and then come watch our show, they鈥檙e going to view it differently, even if they鈥檝e already seen it.

Carlile: My performance changes a lot night to night. Scar can be a bit crazy sometimes. It depends on what I鈥檝e been doing that week. If I鈥檝e been hanging out with my dog a lot, then suddenly it鈥檒l be quite dog-like. If I鈥檓 playing with my children a lot, it becomes childlike. If you were watching it every single night, you wouldn鈥檛 know that I鈥檓 thinking about something different, but I鈥檓 always thinking about something different, and I find that useful.

Yeah. The Lion King鈥檚 story and characters can seem so mythical, archetypal. I think that鈥檚 what helps it reach people on that cellular level. But if you two play mythical and archetypal, you鈥檇 think it could get quite general and bland.

Taylor: Exactly. The characters in this show are the hero, the villain, the sidekick鈥攁ll these archetypes. But layered into that are very real-life issues and obstacles that people relate to, and relate to quite specifically. This movie really gets that. You feel bad for Scar, and you see how a person, how any of us, presented with circumstances would have at least a difficult decision: to rise up and turn the other cheek, or descend.

Broadway's The Lion King 25th Anniversary Production Photos

 
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