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To: vasco soares who wrote (1680)6/14/1999 1:58:00 PM
From: KS  Respond to of 2222
 
June 14, 1999 13:34

Julie Andrews to Publish Memoir and Children's
Books

NEW YORK, June 14 /PRNewswire/ -- Hyperion and Hyperion Books for
Children announced today a publishing deal with famed actress, singer, and
author Julie Andrews. Hyperion will publish Ms. Andrews's as-yet-untitled
memoir, tentatively scheduled for Spring 2001. Hyperion Books for Children will
publish Little Bo in Fall 1999. Little Bo will be a continuing series with a
second book planned for Fall 2001. Future publishing projects include a picture
book series with her daughter Emma Walton Hamilton and Emma's father
Tony Walton.

Of the acquisition, Robert S. Miller, senior vice president and managing
director, Hyperion, said: "Julie Andrews is one of the most beloved members of
the extended Disney family. We couldn't be more thrilled to be working with
her on her memoir."

"Julie Andrews is an accomplished children's book author," added Lisa Holton,
vice president and group publisher of the Disney Children's Book Group. "We
are honored to be the publisher of Julie's delightful new stories for children."

"It has been a great pleasure working on my children's book as well as my
memoir with The Walt Disney Publishing teams. I do hope that the books will
be worthy of the Disney tradition of quality and creativity," Andrews said.

Julie Andrews is a beloved international celebrity known for her elegance,
artistry, and integrity. She is an entertainment phenomenon with a
record-breaking career that spans theater, motion pictures, music, television,
and books.

Andrews's theater work includes two Tony Award nominations for her roles in
My Fair Lady and Camelot. Her recording for My Fair Lady still holds the
record for longevity on the bestseller charts. She won an Academy Award for
her motion picture debut in Mary Poppins, and Academy Award nominations
for The Sound of Music and Victor/Victoria. Her ABC television series, "The
Julie Andrews Hour," received eight Emmy Awards. She is the author of two
children's books, Mandy (1971) and The Last of the Really Great
Whangdoodles (1974), which remains one of the best-selling children's books
of all time.

The Andrews books were acquired by Martha Levin, vice president and
publisher at Hyperion, and Katherine Tegen, editorial director, at Hyperion
Books for Children.

The Disney Children's Book Group is a division of Disney Publishing
Worldwide. The award-winning, high-quality, illustrated books, for ages toddler
to teen, are enjoyed by children worldwide. Disney Children's Book Group
includes the Hyperion Books for Children, Disney Press, Mouseworks, and
Jump at the Sun imprints.

Hyperion, which was founded in 1991, publishes general-interest fiction and
non-fiction hardcover, trade, and mass-market paperback books for adults and
includes the Miramax, ESPN Books, ABC Daytime Press, and Hyperion East
imprints. Hyperion is a unit of ABC, Inc., a division of The Walt Disney
Company.

SOURCE Hyperion

/CONTACT: Jennifer Landers of Hyperion, 212-633-4483; or Stacey Scheinin
of Disney Children's Book Group, 212-807-5496/

/Company News On-Call: prnewswire.com or
fax,
800-758-5804, ext. 138409/



To: vasco soares who wrote (1680)6/18/1999 8:22:00 AM
From: Zoltan!  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2222
 
From the USA's most respected paper:

"Disney's dazzling new "Tarzan" breaks through cinematic boundaries. Words can't match the brilliance of the pictures or the power of the music":

(In other words, Tarzan is ineffable)

June 18, 1999



Film

It May Seem a Bit Wild,
But 'Tarzan' Is Terrific

By JOE MORGENSTERN

How right it is, and how sweet it is, that Walt Disney's dazzling new "Tarzan" finds time for Jane to show her jungle beau the flickering images inside a zoetrope's spinning drum. Zoetrope machines were a crucial part of the dawn of cinema, and "Tarzan" is a showcase for what motion pictures can do in the here and now. Motion is the key word. Never has an animated feature seemed more animated by sheer kinetic joy. "I'll be the best ape ever," Tarzan vows as an overachieving kid -- it's tough to be the only Homo sapiens on your block -- but he grows up to be the best athlete ever. This guy swings, slides, leaps, flies and glides as no screen hero has done before.


Mostly he tree-surfs; that's the term given to Tarzan's arboreal travels by the animator who created him, Glen Keane. Mr. Keane has spoken of taking inspiration from his son's skateboarding, and allied sports, and it's clear that "Tarzan," from its treetops to its taproots, is the work of individual artists, unencumbered by corporate caution. (Its co-directors are Kevin Lima and Chris Buck.) The whole movie swings, from satisfyingly scary (Tarzan's face-off with Sabor the tiger) through charmingly silly (a chaotic dance as a bunch of no-account apes and a neurotic elephant wreck a human camp) to quietly witty ("I'm in a tree with a man who talks to monkeys," Jane declares with baffled delight).

Words can't match the brilliance of the pictures, or the power of the music -- lovely songs and great drumming by Phil Collins, a background score by Mark Mancina. Still, the script, by Bob Tzudiker and Noni White, stirs us with Tarzan's oft-told evolution from trans-species adoptee to natural-born lover who finds the smart, spunky beauty he deserves. And it puts good words into the mouths of fine actors: Tony Goldwyn as Tarzan (who's not just a bodybuilder but, with his anvil-shaped face, a jaw-builder); Minnie Driver as Jane; Glenn Close as Kala, Tarzan's nurturing gorilla mother; Lance Henriksen as Kerchak, his remote and withholding gorilla father; Nigel Hawthorne as Jane's father, Prof. Porter; Rosie O'Donnell as Terk, Tarzan's best buddy; Brian Blessed as Clayton, a Barrymore-esque explorer; and Wayne Knight as the pachyderm Tantor. At one point Jane tells Tarzan he has "no respect for personal boundaries." The movie has no respect for cinematic boundaries. Breaking through them, it sets new ones to be broken.


interactive.wsj.com

And all sans Katzenberg!