美国国家公共电台 NPR Not My Job: We Ask The Choreographer Of 'The Lion King' About Lying Kings(在线收听) |
Not My Job: We Ask The Choreographer Of 'The Lion King' About Lying Kings play pause stop mute unmute max volume 00:0010:08repeat repeat off Update Required To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin. PETER SAGAL, HOST: And now the game where we like to celebrate someone's lifetime of achievement by asking them to achieve just one more thing. When acclaimed choreographer Garth Fagan was growing up in Jamaica, he dreamed of a far off place where he could pursue his art and create his company and teach dance to others. And 40 years ago, he first found that paradise when he came to Rochester, N.Y. (APPLAUSE) SAGAL: The founder of the Garth Fagan Dance Company and the choreographer of the Broadway smash "The Lion King" joins us now. Garth Fagan, welcome to WAIT WAIT... DON'T TELL ME. (APPLAUSE) SAGAL: So do I have that right? Growing up in Jamaica, you dreamed of the hills of Rochester? GARTH FAGAN: No. (LAUGHTER) FAGAN: I was on my way to New York City. And... SAGAL: Yeah. Overshot it a bit (unintelligible). FAGAN: Yeah. And I fell in love with the city, especially in the springtime. SAGAL: Yes. FAGAN: It is not to be believed. AMY DICKINSON: Beautiful. (APPLAUSE) FAGAN: And one eensy-teensy (ph) correction, it was 46 years ago. SAGAL: Excuse me. So we were reading that you were growing up in Jamaica. Did you know that you were interested in dance? Were you one of those young men who knew that he wanted to dance from an early age? FAGAN: Yeah. I'd danced with Ivy Baxter, national company in Jamaica. SAGAL: Yeah. FAGAN: And they traveled around the world, wore beautiful clothes, drove fancy cars. And shallow, shallow empty reasons - I was thrilled to do it. SAGAL: Really? (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: So you weren't interested in dance because of the aesthetic pleasures of beauty? FAGAN: No, no, no, no. SAGAL: You wanted to live that legendary, fast-living, international dancer lifestyle. FAGAN: Hallelujah. SAGAL: Yeah. ADAM FELBER: Right? (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: Did that ultimately work out for you? Did you live a life of luxury and ease? FAGAN: Oh, luxury, yes. Ease - never when you choreograph human beings. (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: Oh, that's the problem. We were reading that your father was not happy with your choice of a career. Is that the case? FAGAN: Absolutely not. He's a Oxford man, Oxford graduate. But he wanted me to be a doctor like him and - you know, something more respectable than dancing. But I have 11 or 12 honorary doctorates. So Daddy, I'm doctor, doctor, doctor, doctor. (APPLAUSE) SAGAL: Was his attitude, well, that's fine for a hobby, but how are you going to make a living? (LAUGHTER) FAGAN: Yes. And in fairness to him, in '73, I didn't know why I was driven to take the company to Jamaica. SAGAL: Yeah. FAGAN: And I charged airline tickets and a hotel on his American Express card (laughter). (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: Now wait a minute, this is great. He, who didn't want you to be a dancer, paid for your tour to Jamaica? FAGAN: Right. SAGAL: And what did he say when he got that bill? FAGAN: Well, when he came to the show, he came backstage. And he was sweetness and light - my son, the choreographer. And the dancers said, you said he was so mean - what a lovely man. (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: Aw... FAGAN: (Laughter) You know, and my brothers and sisters are looking at him, like, we don't know this guy. (LAUGHTER) FAGAN: But when I told him, I said, Dad, I have to tell you something. I charged this trip on your account. And I'll pay it back to you in four or five installments. And that beloved man said you don't owe me a dime. DICKINSON AND POUNDSTONE: (In unison) Aw, wow. DICKINSON: What a story, wow. FAGAN: Just beautiful. DICKINSON AND POUNDSTONE: (In unison) Yeah. PAULA POUNDSTONE: Boy, I feel like a sucky parent now. (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: So Garth, let's talk about "The Lion King." This is the smash Broadway show running for 20 years now. You choreographed these amazing sequences with dancers and puppets of animals that they're performing. How in the world did you figure out how, for example, a giraffe should dance? (LAUGHTER) FAGAN: Well, happily, when I did "Lion King," I'd been to Africa seven times before. SAGAL: Yeah. FAGAN: And I'd been on safaris. So I had a really good idea of how they should move. The only problem is, they don't have to do eight shows a week. (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: The giraffe - the actual giraffe? (LAUGHTER) FAGAN: Right. SAGAL: Yeah. FAGAN: And my dancers had to do eight shows a week. So I had to keep that in mind that it should look like the animal, but there's a human being in there... SAGAL: Right. FAGAN: ...Who has muscles that ache and bones that get fractured. And, you know... FELBER: Jeez... FAGAN: Yeah. And wives and husbands and lovers and mistresses that go A-W-O-L, you know. (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: You have to be - you have to keep the mistresses in mind. FAGAN: Oh, absolutely, absolutely. (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: I... FELBER: You know, I have a friend who've toured with your show, "The Lion King," for many years. And he said that the various dancers and actors in the show develop injuries or pains that are specific to their character. Like, he said, you know, like a Pumba will run into another Pumba on the road and go like... FAGAN: (Laughter). FELBER: ...Oh, yeah, what are you doing for that - the small of your back and your left shoulder? POUNDSTONE: You know, it's a little known fact that gazelles on the Serengeti got together at one point and said to their parents, look, we got seven safaris a week. (LAUGHTER) POUNDSTONE: You know, what do you say we use four legs and walk a shorter distance? (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: Well, Garth Fagan, what a pleasure to meet you and talk to you. We have asked you here today to play a game that this time we're calling... BILL KURTIS: "Lion King" Meet The Lying King. (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: So as we discussed, you helped create "The Lion King," which made us wonder, what would you know about the kings of lying? - that is, really deceitful people. Answer three questions about people who were royally dishonest, and you'll win our prize for one of our listeners, Carl Kasell's voice on their voicemail. Bill, who is choreographer Garth Fagan playing for? KURTIS: Audrey Middleton of Rochester, N.Y. (APPLAUSE) SAGAL: There you go. You ready to do this? FAGAN: Yes, sir. SAGAL: All right, here's your first question. In 2014, French authorities launched a month-long investigation into a kidnapping that was based on a lie. Which of these was it? A, a woman was embarrassed her friends spotted her on a date with a dorky guy, so she said he had kidnapped her; B, a young boy who made up a kidnapping just to get out of going to the dentist; or C, a couple who wanted to visit Paris but couldn't afford the fare so they said they were kidnapped so the police would take them, quote, "home?" (LAUGHTER) FAGAN: I think it was the couple who wanted to get kidnapped thrown out of court go to (imitating French accent) Paris. SAGAL: You know, Paris is worth it. But, in fact, it was the young boy. He really didn't want to go to the dentist. They found him hiding. They said - what? - he said, oh, I was kidnapped. That's why I'm not at the dentist. It took them a month to figure that out. (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: You still have two more chances... FAGAN: I understand that young man (laughter). SAGAL: Yes. (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: Here's your next question. Every year, England holds the world's biggest liar festival for when people from around the globe are given five minutes to tell the most convincing lie they can. There's only one rule - what? A, the contestants are required to tell the lies while looking into the eyes of their disapproving mothers... (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: ...B, politicians and lawyers are not allowed to enter the competition... (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: ...Because they're, quote, "too skilled at telling lies"; or C, the lies have to be told while the contestants' pants are literally on fire? (LAUGHTER) FAGAN: B, B. SAGAL: It is, in fact, B. (SOUNDBITE OF BELL, APPLAUSE) FAGAN: Yay. SAGAL: Last question, lies have played an important role in American history, such as, well, in which of these cases? A, in 1860, a lobbyist made up the word Idaho, said it was a Native American word and named a state after it; B, in 1884, the Republican Party created a completely fictional presidential candidate with the unlikely name of Grover Cleveland... (LAUGHTER) SAGAL: ...Or C, democracy itself is a lie. Am I right sheeple (ph)? (LAUGHTER) UNIDENTIFIED CROWD: A, A, A, A. FAGAN: My colleagues in the audience insist that it is the first letter of the alphabet, A. SAGAL: It is, in fact, A. (SOUNDBITE OF BELL, APPLAUSE) FAGAN: Yay, wow. SAGAL: Idaho is not a real Native American word. But it sure sounds like one, doesn't it? It was made up by a lobbyist. Bill, how did Garth Fagan do on our quiz? KURTIS: It's the circle of life, 2 out of 3 - win. FAGAN AND SAGAL: Yay. SAGAL: Garth Fagan is a Tony Award-winning choreographer. You can find more information about his dance company at garthfagandance.org. Garth Fagan, thank you so much... (APPLAUSE) FAGAN: Thank you, Peter. Thank you. SAGAL: ...For joining us on WAIT WAIT... DON'T TELL ME (unintelligible). (SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "CIRCLE OF LIFE") LEBO M: (Singing in Zulu). SAGAL: In just a minute, Bill reveals his smooth, silky legs in our Listener Limerick Challenge game. Call 1-888-WAIT-WAIT to join us on the air. We will be back in a minute with more of WAIT WAIT... DON'T TELL ME, from NPR. |
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