Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - Alan Menken
Episode Date: February 22, 2021Tony, Emmy, Grammy and 8-time Oscar winning composer Alan Menken joins Gilbert and Frank to talk about the marriage of screen music and images, the demise (and resurrection) of movie musicals, the gen...ius of the late, great Howard Ashman, and the "architecture" of songs like "Be Our Guest," "I See the Light," "Part of Your World" and "Somewhere That's Green." Also, Danny DeVito mimics Jimmy Durante, Steve Martin plays a sadistic dentist, Brad Garrett and Jeffrey Tambor perform a "want" song and Alan praises the talents of John Williams, Thomas Newman and Lin-Manuel Miranda. PLUS: "Fantasia"! The comedy of Randy Rainbow! "I'll Do Anything"! Alan wins a Razzie! And Bob Dylan turns down "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head"! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I can't take it anymore!
I can't take it anymore!
Prince Ali! Say hey to Prince Ali!
Prince Ali!
Say hey, hey, hey to Prince Ali!
Ba-da-ba-da-ba-pow!
Ba-da-ba-da-ba-bop-bop-bop-bop-bow!
Oh, that hurt! Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried, and this is Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast
with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
Ah, well, we'll probably embarrass our guest this week by calling him a living legend, but we're going to do it anyway.
He's a songwriter, conductor, music director, record producer, and composer for stage, television, and motion pictures,
who has received a Tony Award and an Emmy Award, 11 Grammy Awards, and eight Academy Awards. His celebrated stage work
includes the musical Sister Act, The Bronx Tale, Newsies, A Christmas Carol, and Leap of Faith,
successful stage adaptations of his iconic Disney musicals, and of course the most successful production
in the history of Off-Broadway, Little Shop of Horrors. His unforgettable compositions for
feature films helped to usher in a renaissance for both Walt Disney Studios and for big screen musicals in general.
And his scores and songs for films like The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, and Aladdin.
Hey, I think I know that one.
Ah, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Pocahontas, Hercules, Home on the Range, Enchanted and Tangled have earned him eight Oscars and a hallowed place in the history of American songwriting.
Classic hummable melodies like Under the Sea, Be Our Guest, Beauty and the Beast, Friend Like Me, A Whole New World, Go the Distance, Colors of the Wind, and I See the Light.
Have thrilled generations of moviegoers and become part of the soundtrack of our lives.
Not bad for a guy who originally thought he'd go into dentistry.
for a guy who originally thought he'd go into dentistry.
Frank and I are excited to welcome to the show one of the most talented and admired artists of his generation
and a man who clearly didn't think enough of my singing voice
to write me a solo in a lab,
the great Alan Menken.
Thank you, Gilbert.
I would have written you a song.
We just didn't have room for a song
for Iago.
I swear. It would have been great.
Wasn't Humiliate the Boy
supposed to be Jafar
and Iago, Alan?
Yeah, absolutely.
So why didn't you cut out one of Robin's numbers
that would have made sense like sorry about that but you should have cut out friend you should
have cut out friend like me and all right world let's do it let's do it that's fine was that
when when humiliate like humiliate the boy which didn't make the cut, Alan,
was, if I understand it correctly,
was at the point where Gilbert had not even been cast as Iago.
Yeah.
Because I think the parrot, if I'm understanding this correctly,
the parrot was also kind of a cultured British voice.
Oh, boy.
It's possible.
Yeah. But it was way back.
Yeah, it was really way back.
You know, it was one of many songs we tried to get into the movie for Jafar.
And for the movie, we were never able to get a song in for Jafar.
And we ended up putting in a little reprise of Prince Ali.
But, yeah, Humiliate the Boy was one of the early versions that Howard and I wrote.
And then Tim Rice and I wrote a song called Why Me. Again, it didn't make the cut.
Gilbert, did you do a song for the Tiki Room, an Aladdin song that you record?
Yes. Yeah. Yes. When when the Tiki Room switched over, you know, when they got rid of those horrible birds going tiki, tiki,
tiki, tiki, tiki room, which is like torture.
They made it that Iago takes over the tiki room.
I love that.
And so I sang a reworded version of A Friend Like Me.
There you go.
I want to hear that.
I might have heard, I'm trying to remember if I heard that, because I know I heard something
about that, I remember.
Well, good, good.
So you would have written me a song if there was.
Absolutely, absolutely.
First of all, you're Gilbert Gottfried.
You're not chopped liver.
Alan, he's sung on this show dozens of times with Jimmy Webb and Tony Orlando and Paul Schaefer and Kenny Loggins.
And Paul Williams.
And Paul Williams.
All right.
Well, let's sing something.
Sing with me.
What should we sing?
The whole new world.
I can't wait for this.
I can show you the world.
Take you wonder by wonder.
Under by wonder, over sideways and under, on a magic carpet ride.
Okay.
A whole new world.
Oh, my.
Oh, my God, what the world missed.
I can't believe it.
You know why it never happened. In the sequel to Aladdin, they're direct What the world missed. I can't believe it. You know why it never happened.
In the sequel to Aladdin, their direct-to-video ones they were making,
Return of Jafar.
I had two solos in that.
See?
Well, I wasn't involved with those.
Yes, I know.
But as far as the Tiki Room goes gilbert you have you have recorded and performed
an alan macon composition they have yeah yeah and and here's one of those trivia things i bring up
i have a habit of a future guest of this podcast that i've written next to on planes, Richard Mazur. Well, Cole Reiner, I said two rows behind.
Mike Nesmith. Mike Nesmith. Oh, wow. And, oh, God, why do I always forget his name?
John Leguizamo. Oh, yeah. Oh. And you and I, Alan, wrote next to each other,
sat next to each other on a plane.
Oh, yeah, of course.
I think I was some press junkets, too.
We traveled together.
What I remember is this is the way I'm always in a daze.
You were sitting by the window.
I sat down next to you, and you turned to me and said, Gilbert, how are you?
And I was like, hi.
And then you pointed to yourself and said, Alan Menken.
And I went, oh, oh, yes.
Hi, Alan.
I didn't know if you remembered.
Well, listen, you're more of a known face and voice than I am.
Did you think it was just another fan saying hello, Gilbert, on a plane?
Yeah.
I was very annoyed that he was bothering me.
Oh, that's right.
Wait a sec.
No, we got onto a plane together.
Was it in Toronto?
Yeah.
I don't remember where.
Oh, yeah.
It was some airport.
We were standing in some waiting area
and we were both fetching and as one does alan tell us why i'm interested in in your childhood
i was doing some research and you grew up in a home like many of us did where uh broadway
soundtracks were playing your parents had a great love of music your father played the piano yes my
father played my mother was an actress. Yes, my father played piano.
My mother was an actress.
My father was a dentist, but he loved to play the piano,
mostly boogie-woogie.
Boogie-woogie, yeah.
But he had all the books of the great,
there's a Rodgers and Hart book, and the Gershwins,
and Frank Lesser, and he would open the book and just pound his way through the songs.
And I would play the right hand and he'd play the left hand.
And they'd play cast albums throughout the whole house.
And it was great.
When I wanted to go into music, they were a little concerned
because I never liked to practice.
And most people assume, well,
someone's going to go into the music business,
but he's going to sit and be very diligent and practice. But all I wanted to do was just
play to enjoy myself. And of course, that kind of passion to just sit and play and
people have a misconception that that means it's just a hobby and not something that becomes
important in your life. And the truth is the thing you want to do every day is what you should do in
your life. It's the thing you really love. And that's, is what I love just creating music on the spot.
I love, I love learning things about the guests and going to your website. There's that wonderful
video of you with the electric guitar doing your best Jimi Hendrix.
Oh yeah. My, my harmony, Harmony Electric guitar. Oh, God.
Those things you remember when you were a kid.
I remember, you know, even the smell of the guitar.
The feel of that.
Oh, my God, I have an electric guitar.
So there were pop star aspirations?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
My dad, Norman Menken, DDS.
And he introduced me to a lot, you know, a lot of music.
You know, for instance, when we were working on Aladdin and we had the character of the genie,
and actually it was the genie of the ring.
The description of the genie of the ring
really brought Harlem and Harlem jazz to mind.
And so I thought of Fats Waller,
and thus came a friend like me and Prince Ali,
which is more Cab Calloway.
Those are all out of, you know, normie.
My dad was a huge influence on me that way.
What a thrill that must have been for him,
getting to hear this stuff
and knowing that he implanted some of that.
Yeah, well, once I was,
you know, sort of making it in the business, it became thrilling to him. Until then,
he was a little concerned. I remember when I was working on Little Shop of Horrors,
as I always would, I would make a recording of the score to the show and send it to my parents
just to have them hear what their son is working on. And I sent him the score to the show and send it to my parents just to have them hear
what their son is working on.
And I sent them the score to the little shop.
Now, I should explain that my dad, of course, was a dentist.
That's all the men in my family were.
Besides that, my dad was president of the New York chapter
of the American Analgesia Society,
a society of dentists that promote the use of nitrous oxide as safe.
I know where you're going with this.
And I thought it would be funny if we had the dentist, because how are we going to end Act One and have the dentist killed?
In the movie, Seymour throws a bottle and it hits a bump on the head.
That becomes Audrey 2's first big
meal. But that wasn't going to work for a stage musical. I said, how about that the dentist
laughs himself to death on nitrous oxide because he really wants to give it to himself instead of
the patients. Howard thought that was hilarious. And we went with that. And so my parents heard
the tape and I came home and there was on the answering machine, I guess, hi, Alan.
It's mom.
We heard the tape.
Okay.
Click.
So Janice said, oh, I think your mother was just so moved.
I said, I don't think so.
And I called the magazine.
Well, how would you feel if you expect your life promoted
if the use of nitrous oxide is safe
and your son writes a show where somebody dies on nitrous oxide?
But then, of course, the show opened, became a big hit,
and my dad would talk to his buddies and said,
well, you know, you have to believe in man-eating plants.
And next thing I know, whenever, you know,
Oren would pull the thing down and say,
look, Seymour, this could happen to you,
and he'd show an X-ray of a,
or a photo of some really horribly deformed teeth.
That was usually one of my dad's patients
that he would give me the photo to use for the show.
And among your many awards, endless awards, you won an award for worst song.
Yes. Worst song of the year, the Razzie Award. I found that I won the Razzie Award on the night
of winning the two Oscars for Beauty and the Beast, which was a big night. It was wonderful.
And I go back there, I'm in the press room and I'm talking about, you know, Beauty and the Beast and
Celine Dion and Angela Lansbury and all the wonderful things about the show and all that.
And then somebody says, how does it feel to have won the award for worst song of the year?
I said, what are you talking? I didn't know. He said, what are you talking about?
And it turns out I'd won the Razzie Award for worst song of the year
for High Times, Hard Times from Newsies.
The song was Ann Morgan on the swing.
High times, hard times.
Sometimes I live in the sweet.
And sometimes there's nothing to eat.
And I got to admit, it was a pretty embarrassing scene.
But years went by.
People loved the movie.
And then I went from the Razzie for Worst Song of the Year to the Tony for Best Score for the same project.
But some, you know, 30 years later, which is, I think, a great lesson for people.
You never give up on anything.
Gilbert, you don't have any Razzies in your whole career?
Amazingly, no.
You'd think I'd have an entire couch for that.
Well, I have to say, with the Razzie, I found out just very recently there was a physical Razzie award, which I didn't have.
So I had my office get in touch with them and say, Alan would love to get the physical Razzie.
So years later, they send me, the box comes with a physical Razzie award.
And it's this little, you know, it's in a little, on a stand.
And it's got these little gold beads together in a raspberry form.
I put it down and literally five of the beads just fall off the thing immediately.
So it's clearly not exactly the most expensive thing in the world, but it's very appropriate.
You said when Newsies came out, it was really bombing and you were sitting with Jeffrey
Katzenberg
and could you tell
I loved the movie
I knew the songs were really good
it was Christian Bales
he was like 15 years old
playing our Jack Kelly
so the movie opened
and it made like
2.6 million at the box office and so the movie opened and it made like you know, bupkis
it was like 2.6 million
at the box office
and I had
a breakfast I remember at the Four Seasons
with Jeffrey Katzenberg
and it's traditional with Jeffrey Katzenberg
you usually get about a five minute breakfast with him
hey buddy, have a cup of coffee?
okay, hey
and out
anyway, but I remember saying, you know, what are we going to do?
He said, about, about Newsies. He said, Mencken, I could take $10 million and throw it up in the
air here on Doheny Boulevard. And it would do just as much good. It's DOA, baby, DOA. And bye-bye Newsies.
And yet you win a Tony for the same music years later.
People loved it.
It really made a splash over the years, but not at the box office.
There's that challenge you talk about in interviews where you're talking about how slow people are to accept actors in live action, suddenly opening their mouths and singing.
Well, there is that, yes, absolutely. A problem you don't have in animation.
You know, there's a documentary out now about Howard, Howard Ashford.
Oh, I just watched it. It's great.
So you saw...
I loved it.
Yeah, in that interview we were doing at the 92nd Street, why?
Howard, it was just hilarious.
He's saying, you know,
people are watching a movie and they're going, why are they singing? But at that time,
movie musicals were pretty dead. So were animated musicals. It was dead. And, you know, really,
I got to say, we were involved in bringing it back with Little Mermaid.
It was just really good timing.
You absolutely were.
I remember James L. Brooks making a film called I'll Do Anything.
I don't know if you remember this.
I do remember.
In the 90s.
And there were songs in it. He had Albert Brooks was in there and Nick Nolte.
And I can't remember who the actress was.
And he had to pull the songs out because they tested so poorly.
And then there was also, there was the, Woody Allen did a movie called, I think,
Everybody Says I Love You.
That's right.
Which had songs in it. And you really have to know exactly how you're using these songs.
In the form, you've got to, you're making a pact with an audience. They have to know why things are being sung,
and they have to really know why and understand the context
and understand the style and understand how it works.
Otherwise, they're just going to tune it out.
Well, it's just like when I watch a movie.
Sometimes you watch a movie and music starts playing,
and you go, okay,
they want us to start laughing now,
or they want us to,
and,
and it,
it distracts you from the scene.
If it's done badly,
it distracts you if it's done well.
Yeah.
And,
and also it's like,
if a musical just done badly,
it go,
you go like,
well, why are these people in the streets singing?
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, and then, but if you carry it even further,
then you look at something like Springtime for Hitler, right?
And the brilliance of Mel Brooks.
I mean, it's spoofing somebody who creates something so absurd.
But if you're in on the joke,
it becomes the best joke ever.
I mean, the thing about comedy songs especially
is almost always when you want to laugh at a comedy song
is because you feel smarter than the person singing it,
you know, the character that's singing it.
You're sort of ahead of it.
So, you know, with comedy,
it's a very specific set of conditions
that helps, let's say, a comedy song to land
or an emotional song to land.
If you want an emotional song, you know, to land
and make someone cry,
the last thing you're going to do is write a song where somebody's feeling sorry for themselves.
Now, you know, you want to write something where they're feeling very hopeful in a very
dark situation. So there's all these little nuances that you learn over the years
about what makes a musical tick. I've heard you say that about Audrey's character in Little Shop,
that she has every reason to feel sorry for herself,
and yet she doesn't when she sings her want song, as you call it.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's...
I know Seymour's the greatest
But I'm dating a semi-savist
So I got a black eye and my arms in the cast.
So that Seymour's a cutie.
Well, if not, he's got inner beauty.
And I dream of a place where we could be together at last.
She's just so dreaming of this little tacky house that she can be in.
And we fall in love with her because she has this dream,
but she is the saddest loser in the world.
And that rule of opposites really works for musicals.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing Colossal Podcast after this.
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And here's something I ask every singer and composer on this show.
It's still a mystery to me, and that's where do songs come from?
It's the vocabularies.
Like, where does that last sentence come from?
Because you know how to speak and you understand the language.
And music is a language.
from it because you know how to speak and you understand the language and music is a language
so i understand the language and i also understand that with any music like take a lot take you know our aladdin for example um to just have somebody start singing without a context wouldn't have worked. But to start the movie with, for instance, immediately you go, oh, I get it. We're doing a
very broad spoof of the mysterious East. And as soon as they get the tone and they go, okay,
we're not taking this seriously. I get it. People are in on it. And every step of the way you make choices
that are fun and imaginative
and then always have a wink that you can go to
where people understand the context of the music.
And then it comes from an inner place
where I love music and I love creating music of a style.
And also, you know, part of that is also going on, you know,
I'm going to write this thing and I go, Oh no, that's a piece of crap.
I'm going to throw that out. Let me try this one. Oh, not to be.
And knowing when to go, okay, that one's good. Good. You know,
you never fall in love with your own material.
Just always be ready to throw something out.
You know, it's funny. I was just watching.
They just showed recently The Conqueror.
Yeah.
John Wayne's Genghis Khan in Asian makeup.
Oh, my God.
And there's, out of nowhere, there's like a musical scene with these girls.
And I remember thinking, oh, there's Hollywood's faraway land music.
Yeah, yeah.
And, you know, in different eras, people are more used to it.
You know, it's all a matter of context.
I don't know where audiences became so cynical about music and films, though, Alan,
because we grew up with West Side Story and The Sound of Music.
Musicals were part of the fabric of American cinema.
And then one day,
you know what I mean, Gilbert? One day it just became unhip for people to sing.
Music migrated over to recording. It came back a little bit with the Beatles, you know, and Help
and Hard Day's Night. But, you know, heartfelt break into song where you're really singing in the moment really counts on it being in a genre that supports it.
And yeah, audiences now have obviously smaller attention spans and they're smaller now than they were when we were doing Aladdin.
They're getting smaller and smaller.
But that's why, you know, if you look at what Randy Rainbow does,
for instance, on YouTube.
He's great.
Those are currently the equivalent of musicals now.
That's amazing.
Little mini moments.
But, you know, that's how it works.
Anytime you sing in a context where it's telling a story
or giving a message, that is a musical.
And if it works, it's a musical.
But people need to understand the context and understand why am I listening to this.
And can you play, if you could remember, everybody has that one song that they're completely embarrassed by that they wrote.
Do you have one of those?
Well, do I have one of those? Well,
do I have one of them? I have like
a ton.
Well, I'm not...
I'm not embarrassed by any song I've
written in terms of the
quality of the actual writing, except
when I was a kid.
I remember when I got my first guitar
I wrote a song.
I think I was 11 years old.
I wrote, if she's gone.
If I wanted to sound, you know, I think Bob Dylan had come out and I wanted to sound, you know, sort of hip.
And I've been through a lot in my life. She's gone now.
And I want to die.
gone, gone and I wanna die
You know
I'm living a lie
She'd have stayed
if only I had asked
But I know
I can't bring back the past
And of course I only had about 11 years of past.
See, I like that.
I must be crazy.
For an 11-
I thought the same thing.
I thought, oh, this is one of his bad songs.
It's pretty good.
And it's good.
No, I don't write bad songs.
I just, it's only bad musical assignments
or inappropriate times to be writing, playing a song.
And for an 11-year-old to be hunched over the guitar playing,
ah, she's gone, might've been a little stupid.
You have to see a picture of me when I looked like at 11,
you know, basically with my horn-ribbed glasses
and my crew cut and the pants that were two sizes too large and all that.
Alan, where did you learn the storytelling of songwriting?
Was it learned in the BMI workshop?
Or did you know instinctively listening to all these soundtracks as a kid?
No.
Did you learn structure?
It came later.
No.
The structure, there was a great teacher named Laman Engel
who ran the BMI Musical Theater Workshop.
Laman had been a, was a legendary conductor and composer.
But as a conductor, he had conducted so many of the Broadway shows of the 40s and 50s.
He conducted Porgy and Bess.
Wow.
And Laman had a workshop, and he also wrote a book called Words with Music,
And Lehman had a workshop, and he also wrote a book called Words with Music, which really defined the ABCs of writing a musical from the viewpoint of the pit of a show.
And so in this workshop that I was in for years, we would basically discuss how songs land in a musical and they follow an arc. And besides, you know, being in the context, the songs also, you always have to be ahead of the story. Songs always have to be
pushing story forward. You never write a song without knowing how are you going to stage this?
What is the actor doing while they're singing? What is, you know, what is going on that,
What is the actor doing while they're singing?
What is going on that we want to watch?
So I have to ask all these questions and be able to answer these questions before I let my hands anywhere near the keyboard or near a piece of music paper.
Because Little Shop seems like a textbook case to me of that.
It establishes the world.
The girl group establishes the tone. Yeah.
You know what you're in for. You get Seymour's story right up front. You get Audrey's story, what she wants.
And before we came up with that version of Little Shop, we had an earlier version of Little Shop, which was completely, was much more like the Corman movie.
Like there was a song.
It was very much, you know, also there's a song. When it's time to pick a pet flower, who's the shrub we love? Who's our pot and plant of the hour?
Who's our bush when push comes to shove?
Who rakes in that cash?
Those kudos, look, my hook came through.
That Audrey Hepburn or Audrey Wood, both those ladies are well and good.
The dismal failures besides the beautiful Audrey too.
And the little pods go, Audrey, Audrey, Audrey too.
And people listened to it and said,
you guys, are you crazy?
This made no sense.
And then Howard came in with the idea of,
you know what?
We're going to do this as the dark side of Grease.
And also, it's a story that feels like the end of the world.
You want to tell through songs that feel like the Phil Spector rock and roll and the girl groups.
And as soon as you go, oh, I get it.
I get what they're doing.
It's like the music you find in some cheap beach blanket horror movie from the 60s.
Then, boom.
It's all about the conceit.
That it's all about the conceit. And again, it's if you get that right, then then you start writing and you sort of pour your creativity into that mold. Because it's funny if a musical is not done right, you go, well, why are they singing in the middle of dinner?
Exactly.
Exactly.
You know, I mean, there's many examples, you know, of wonderful pop singers or, you know, songwriters who don't really know the rules of writing a musical and just write songs to tell the story. That sort of follow the story, but don't really have a break into song quality about them.
And they're kind of legendary.
They kind of, they become concept albums that people sort of think they love
and they have some wonderful songs in them,
but they're never going to work in that bigger context.
And that bigger context is a huge part of what we do as musical theater writers.
Your late great partner, Howard Ashman, and people really
should see the documentary, which will plug like crazy, made by Don Hahn, who you worked with
forever. Yeah, and it's on Disney+. Disney+, a real labor of love, a real sweet film. But I found
it interesting that when Howard first had the idea to take this kind of obscure Corman movie
and turn it into a musical, that there was some skepticism.
You yourself had not seen the film.
Do I have that right?
No, I didn't see it until Howard recommended it to me,
and then I flipped out because I knew you could just feel it's such a good idea.
But Howard and I were very in tune that way.
Yeah.
There was that sense of that off-kilter.
There was that sense of that off-kilter.
And when you find a property that you can make your own,
for instance, the idea of telling the Aladdin story in a style of like a Hope Crosby road picture,
which is really a lot of the style of what we drew on
for that, you know,
the mysterious East
and the idea of telling it through that.
Now, the idea of telling
the Little Mermaid
and using Brecht and Weill
for the style of Ursula or whatever,
all those choices
are worth their weight in gold.
You know, one of the inspirations for Ursula was divine. Yeah, I was going to ask you about that. A lot of, you know, or whatever, all those choices are worth their weight in gold.
One of the inspirations for Ursula was divine.
I was going to ask you about that. There was some very hip elements, and you sneak them into something
with a heart so pure of the Disney animated things,
and something magical happens.
Did you ever have one of those assignments where you have to write a song
for something, and you go, I just don't know.
I just don't see it.
Yeah, of course.
I mean, I've had whole musicals that, you know, you could so much wonderful material could go into something.
And if it's not right, it's just like flushing it down the toilet.
And other times, if the idea is right,
you can write almost anything for it and it works.
Yeah, let's see.
I remember we wanted to write a comedy song for Pocahontas.
And we kept trying, Stephen Schwartz and I,
to write a comedy song.
And we had Grandmother Willow.
I remember we were trying to find something comedic
and one after the other,
they were just embarrassingly not funny.
But, you know
it's simply a bad assignment and then we wanted to have a comedy song for hunchback of roger dom
and we actually were able to even though after the stage version it was removed but
what possibly could be funny you know in in the animated movie of hunchback of roger dom
and we came up with, well,
we just had to establish these characters,
these gargoyles who are sort of basically Quasimodo's inner voice.
And at some point they know that he,
his heart is just so moved by Esmeralda and said,
you don't be funny.
If he's grotesque, gargoyles sing to Quasimodo about what clearly good looking guy he is and how a guy like you, she'd never done it.
So it's basically a French boulevard song that three grotesque gargoyles sing to a deformed hunchback.
And it was charming and funny, but it took a lot of work to find something funny in Hunchback of Notre Dame.
But Howard was a master of that in sort of beating up your own characters to make a comedy song.
You know, Gaston.
Yeah, a great one.
Would you call that a drinking song, Gaston?
Well, yeah, it's like a Sigmund Romberg drinking song.
Gaston?
Well, yeah, it's like a Sigmund Romberg drinking song, and it's these denizens of this bar who are basically like Neanderthals
singing in praise of this complete lunkhead, and you get it.
Now, you know, when you get,
I use antlers in all of my decorating.
It's just, it's full on the floor, hysterical.
So those are great, you know, really good assignments.
But there are some times where people say,
we need a comedy song here, but there's no good idea for it.
You're just, you know, falling over, not laughing,
trying to write anything that'll work.
Similarly, you know, people,
if you get trapped into writing a self-pitying song
and thinking that people will
be moved by it and that's, that's not going to work. I wouldn't dare ask you a favorite
making composition, but, but I will ask, is there, is there one song that was especially
satisfying and that you struggled with it and then you finally solved it? Does something like
that come to mind or does it happen so frequently? No, it doesn't.
If the assignment is right, it's not a struggle.
But talking about Hunchback, I'm very drawn to the out there. There's something about that piece of music preceded,
which is one of the very few times I write a piece of music
that preceded the actual project.
And ironically, with that score
was that was when i finally stopped getting oscars they drew the line after pocahontas said
no more for menken that's it and they were like among musicians it seems like uh well that's why
there are a lot of hack musicians who do this and great ones.
You find certain notes.
I heard that these notes make you happy.
These notes you get sad.
Well, it's harmonies.
You know, yes, every piece of music obviously has a connotation.
If I want you to be here,
that clearly will give you sort of a sense of melancholy about it,
as opposed to...
There's simply, it's, you know, right on the face of it,
music is a vocabulary.
It's like having a discussion.
And it's, to me, I always believe that
when you get to a musical, you should be,
you should be able to be so,
you should be able to actually just play the music
with no words for a song moment and get
what is dramatically needed oh that's fascinating you should be that clear about the musical choice
that it's it's creating an emotion creates it creates a moment it creates an emotion it creates
it creates a world doesn't mean that it entirely tells the story but the musical choices should be that specific and that
and that tailored to the moment to the character to the arc of the story and all that tell us about
meeting howard for the first time i had been exclusively a composer lyricist myself and i
get a call from i think maury yes maury Esten wrote Nine and Grand
Hotel and the musical
of Titanic. And Maury
called me and said, Alan, this is this guy,
Howard Ashman. He's looking for
a composer. I know you
write music and lyrics, but would you meet
with him? He said he has
the rights to a novella
by Kurt Vonnegut called God Bless Mr.
Rosewater. I said, oh, I love
Vonnegut. And so I agreed to meet with Howard. He came to my apartment. Howard had his own theater.
Is that the WPA? WPA. And Kyle Rennick and Howard, it was this hole in the wall theater on
the third floor of 18th Street and Fifth Avenue, 19th, sorry, 19th and 5th,
right above the Chopsticks Massage Parlor.
This wonderfully tacky little space.
And yeah, I mean, you know,
he has the property that I love and the theater.
Little did I know he's also an incredible genius.
Although I could tell his lyrics were good, but his sense of what he wanted was so palpable.
And he was this triple threat.
He was a book writer, lyricist, and director,
which worked wonderfully with Rosewater and with Little Shop.
It's fascinating in the dark to watch how he would sing for the performers,
how he always kept everything in his head the whole time.
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
He knew exactly how things should go, exactly how things should play, how the joke should play.
Yeah. Where to, where to place the emphasis. Yeah. Did you guys all, did you, your process was,
were you always in the same room together? You prefer it that way? Oh, absolutely. Yeah. You
want to, you want to get the nuance of somebody going, oh, I love that. Or, I don't know, you know, or I like that, but
I think that came too easy to you. Or you, I think you've done that one before. You should do
something a little further. You want that immediate feedback to just, that's what at least I do. And,
and, and I also want to get, you know, him to have a sense of, of where I want to go with the song.
And so it's that whole push and pull.
Those must have been great moments.
Yep.
I thought of another song, but I mean, it's just such a terrific Burt Bacharach song.
What's that?
But when you really think about it, raindrops keep falling on my head.
Yeah?
It's like you go, whoa. Fall falling on my head. Yeah. It's like you go, well,
I'm falling on my head.
Bert has this wonderful, you know, a song like that,
and most of Bert Bacharach's, when you get into it.
There's number one.
What you're responding to first is a sense of ownership.
You feel comfortable.
Rhythmically and harmonically,
this is a man who knows exactly where he wants to be. You feel it in the music.
You feel it in the voice.
You feel it in the whole sense of the song.
And music is a combination of obviously tonalities and rhythm and dynamics in a way that
it's like cooking in the hands of the right person. You cook a meal and it's just heavenly
and someone else can have the same recipe, but it may not be quite as good.
Burt Bacharach and Bacharach and David are just masters, master songwriters.
I think that song was written with a hope that Bob Dylan would do it.
Have you heard this story?
No.
Yes, I believe that's true.
We'll double and triple check it, and it eventually wound up in the hands of B.J. Thomas, who did a wonderful job with it.
My understanding is they had a fantasy of Dylanylan recording that that must have been quite a fantasy
i'll triple i'll triple check and get back to you it's so perfect because when you really think of
raindrops keep falling on my head in that scene he's on the bicycle yeah it's great it's great
marriage in in a funny way,
when you think about it,
you go,
what does that song have to do with anything?
But look at
Sound of Silence
and The Graduate.
Yeah.
It's another good marriage.
That defined a generation.
You know,
we all went away to college
with Simon and Garfunkel
being sort of in our blood.
You know,
a lot of it because of the
marriage of, again, that story and that song. Not to say, all the material was wonderful and
had a magical effect on us. But when you combine a song with a visual, when I was growing up,
I think my favorite Disney movie was Fantasia. And it was, you know, you have these great classical pieces and it's imagery.
And I just forever after that married the sense of a story and imagery to music.
And I never listened to classical music in the same way again after that.
I think you have some of those moments in your films, too, in your work.
I mean, I See the Light is a great marriage of imagery yeah and and and music
yeah it's beautiful thank you the way that comes together we i that okay there's one
i struggled with about i don't know 10 different versions of that song till we came up with that
one because we were at a certain point we had one that was a just big in a blaze of life
in a blaze of light.
Na, na, na, na, na.
You know, a perfectly wonderful song if you wanted a big, over-the-top big ballad.
And it turns out that, you know,
all those days watching from the windows,
all those years outside looking in,
something very delicate and quiet,
that's what was needed.
But I remember sitting
in a room with a guy named chris montan who who was the head you know the head of music and
animation at disney for all those years and just trying how about this one how about this one it
was like an eye test is this better is this better is this and we followed okay that's where we want
to go great and once we you know because you've got to get just what does that moment want yeah
you we talked before gilbert on this show about songs of longing and and alan you write a great
longing song thank you you write you and you write a you write a beautiful love song thank you there's
you i i i assume you just you just have a a knack for it yeah i do I do. You know, it's like a player hitting a fastball.
We couldn't hit a Chapman fastball.
Part of your world is another one.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's another one that's just haunting.
But where it comes from is we know there's water flowing in the ocean.
And that sense of just water flowing in the ocean and that sense of just water flowing
look at this stuff isn't it neat wouldn't you think my collection's complete wouldn't you think
i'm a girl girl who has everything look at this trove Treasures untold
How many wonders can one cavern hold
Looking around, who do you think is sure
She's got everything
I got gadgets and gizmos aplenty
And listen to the Howard's
Lyric specificity
I got who's it's and what's it's galore
You want thingamabobs, I got twenty
But who cares
No big deal. I want more.
I want to be where the people are. You know, there are times where the music needs to be a bed
for those lyrics just to rest on. And there are times where the music is the propulsive element and the lyrics need to support
that. It's, again, that's all about collaboration and experience working together.
What wonderful moments. I can only imagine the magic that you guys, those little moments when
the sparks hit, when it all came together in the room. When you hear the songs years later,
I mean, songs trigger memories in everybody in a way, but when you hear these songs years later, do you flash back to a moment? Ah, I remember we
solved that right there. Absolutely. Absolutely. How nice that they all trigger such happy memories.
Oh, yeah. Yeah. I'll tell you a story that is the silliest story ever.
We were doing the stage musical of Hunchback of Notre Dame in Berlin.
Potsdamer Platz.
And we were doing what's called a zits probe.
Zits probe is the first time the orchestra plays through a score.
And the singers are there and the orchestra is there
and big orchestra in this room full of producers,
all Germans.
We were literally within spinning distance
of where Hitler's bunker was.
Wow.
It was right by the walls.
Potsdamer Platz was right by it.
And Stephen Schwartz and I had a problem
we couldn't solve with one number.
And Michael Cosby, our conductor, was about to run down this number.
I said, we want to go down the hallway and just try to fix this one section.
So just rehearse something else, and then we'll come in and we can rehearse that number.
So he says, well, I'll rehearse the first part of the song.
And we went to another room.
We're fiddling at the piano.
And we finally solved it.
We go, oh, my God, we solved it.
And I am so excited. I come rushing
into the room, throw the doors open. I said, guys, I've arrived at the final solution.
Ouch.
And the room freezes.
And the room freezes.
These two Jewish songwriters, a Jewish conductor.
And I'm sure, you know, the orchestra, you know,
that God knows Germany's changed night and day since obviously since the Holocaust.
But I just think of that moment of the aha moment
and I have to laugh anytime I think about, you know, one of the aha moments.
Anyway.
So there are humorous moments as well.
Yeah.
Not just moments of triumph.
Anytime I play Beauty and the Beast, I think about, you know, how Howard never lived to see Beauty and the Beast.
Tale as old as time.
It's just, you know, it's always,
I simply flashback to when we wrote that song.
There's also, you know, it says over the years of,
I lose the sense of ownership of the song.'s like your children your children grow up they go out into the world and they have their own lives
and in a way i know i gave birth to these songs and these songs are really they have their own
lives now you know um i'll gladly still accept the royalties. You've sent them off to college.
Yeah.
And they've sent my kids off to college.
Yeah, there's a sense that the songs belong to the world at a certain point.
Good memories, too, about when the songs come together in the recording session. There's a nice moment in the Howard documentary where you guys are sitting there and Angela Lansbury and Jerry Orbach go into the booth.
Oh, God.
And boom,
it there's,
there's just,
it clicks and you could see the two of you guys light up.
I understand.
We had rehearsed the song,
David Friedman conducted and we had rehearsed the song.
Angela went in to just sing it with the orchestra.
And that was the first take.
Wow.
Now we did, you know, afterwards get a couple just for safety,
but that was the first take.
And it was, yes, it was utter magic.
It could just be gutting, you know,
the experience of that full orchestra and the voice.
Are there composers that you look at and go,
damn,
I wish I could be as good as that guy.
In,
in certain respects,
I can tell you which composers I love,
you know,
listen to a John Williams score and I just go weird.
It's,
you know.
Oh yeah.
You're a Jerry Goldsmith guy too.
Jerry Goldsmith.
Yeah.
Alan Silvestri.
Okay.
One, I can't duplicate.
I cannot duplicate
how Tom Newman
does what he does.
Tom Newman.
He's great.
He's great.
And I knew Tom
when he was trying
to write for musical theater.
It was the same kind of style.
And it wasn't really
quite right for musical theater,
but what he does for film,
you know,
every score will have
a temp score. They'll give you, they'll put it know, every score will have a temp score.
They'll give you, they'll put it maybe, if they put it a Tom Newman piece of music in the temp score, it gives you fits because you can't duplicate what he does.
I mean, Lin-Manuel Miranda, I can't, just you look at the brilliance that comes out of him.
I knew Lin when he was a kid, a little kid, because he was a huge fan of Little Mermaid.
Then we got to work together on the
latest Mermaid movie.
But when you see In the Heights
and Hamilton, and I go,
how? How?
Yeah, he's a talent.
And that's with any of the...
There are moments
I remember in seeing Dear Evan Hansen
and what Pasek and Paul did.
I went, look what they did there.
They're sort of repeating that.
Just, you know, there's a freshness of style and intelligence.
You see, when I saw Book of Mormon, that's what Bobby Lopez does.
And yeah, there isn't a song where I look, I say, wicked, and I say, what Stephen did in that.
There are moments that are just magic.
But because I've had a lot of gratification for what I do and a lot of support, I don't,
it doesn't throw me into a feeling of insecurity.
I just, I'm now, thank God, able to just be, I love that.
I, you know, I listen, Adam Gettle has done some things
and I go, weird, look at those turns he makes.
It's so interesting.
I wouldn't have thought to do that.
You know, there's Gershwin.
And you grew up listening to Lerner and Lowe and Rodgers and Hammerstein,
and you said Frank Lesser.
Frank Lesser.
Think of a song like Sit Down, You're Rockin' the Boat and the construction of that.
Yeah.
Artful, artful to listen to.
It's just aful to listen to. It's just a pleasure, a pleasure to listen to.
And also in anything like movies, a director or a cameraman is going to like be extra critical.
So do you find yourself when you're watching a musical?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I do.
I will find myself getting ahead of it.
Like I, you know, if I find that I'm going,
I know what the next chord's going to be,
I can feel what the next note's going to be,
then I get a little disappointed
because you want to be taken on a journey,
but you want the journey to be a surprise.
And for me, it's harder. It's harder for it to be taken on a journey, but you want the journey to be a surprise. And for me, it's harder.
It's harder for it to be a surprise for me than it would be for other people to a degree.
And also structurally, I go, oh, God, they missed an opportunity there.
You know, it's hard for me to see musicals because I will have basically one of two reactions.
Both of them not good.
One will be, oh, my God, it's so good.
It makes me depressed.
Or it's not good. One will be, oh my God, it's so good, it makes me depressed. Or it's not good, and I'm depressed.
Doesn't that happen with you
in comedy, Gilbert? Don't you see the bit coming?
Or see, by this point in your career?
Oh, yes.
See where the turn is, or where the twist is coming?
You're ahead of it?
Yeah, when I watch comedy,
for the most part,'m going oh that was clever
oh that was yeah that's a good line yeah but but the thing is like this is the gilbert godfrey
style of comedy is is a conduit for certain comedy that will be funny is coming out of your mouth
yeah there's just something about it it's like there's a part of you that's like,
it's like a stult behind it that is not commenting on it,
but it's just this welcome mat where sometimes it's crazy stuff.
Sometimes it's utter filth.
Sometimes it's utter absurdity.
And it's perfect Gilbert Gottfried.
You know, I've seen, I listen a lot to the comedy channels on Sirius.
They play, you're up there a lot
and I'll hear some, you know,
some of your routines that I haven't heard before.
It's just, it's like,
it's like a gospel preacher getting on a roll,
but this is sometimes a roll downhill
or a roll just into someplace
you just never thought you were going to go to.
I would think the same thing with musically. I may feel like, oh, I envy that, but I have my
own voice. You have your own voice. I think we know that we have our own niche. I think that's
why no one can write for you, Gilbert, because your comedy comes from such a unique sensibility
and you're deconstructing your comedy as you do it.
You know this about yourself, right?
Yeah.
They used to call – sometimes they would call what you did anti-comedy.
Remember that phrase?
Yeah, because real comedy is funny.
Yeah.
Okay, sure.
We know Gilbert's self-deprecating, but you know what?
That's funny.
So many comics are really self-deprecating, and that's part of the strength, isn't it?
Well, he's an absurdist.
He's a surrealist, Gilbert.
The Ben Gazzara bit, extraterrestrial showing up on Ben Gazzara's lawn, it's Salvador Dali.
Alan, how hands- on are you with with performers?
We know Howard was very hands on. And I'm bringing up two people who've done this podcast, Brad Garrett and Jeffrey Tambor.
Oh, another another song. Another I guess I've got a dream is a want song.
Yes. From both of them entangled. I'm less hands-on than I used to be.
I used to be very hands-on, and for a multitude of reasons.
One being, I have a great team.
Uh-huh.
Two being, a lot of the times, we're doing something of mine for the third time, and I don't really have anything new to add.
I'd rather have somebody else bring something fresh to it.
Also, maybe I don't want to get on a plane and actually sit in the recording studio for, you know, for four days.
And I'd rather just give you my notes.
And the thrill is gone for that kind of thing.
I see.
You know, Howard and I took on producing the music because we were the only ones who really understood what we were going to do. And now, you know, I feel it's people who really do understand that, you know, not better,
but to understand what our intentions were, what my intentions are.
And I still, there are times I've said some crazy things.
I'm a little notorious for sometimes saying the wrong thing to singers.
I remember Judy Kuhn was doing Just Around the Riverbend from Pocahontas,
and she had just gotten to the ISO booth, and I wanted to make sure that the mic was getting
her at the right volume. So she's singing Just Around the Riverbend record and i put my finger on the button i said to judy
was that your performance to to which the room got very quiet judy said i guess not uh you know
and he go no no no no you don't understand christian bale came in he had been working on
santa fe for i don't know how long six you know, because he's clearly not a singer, but he said, Anna Faye.
And I go, I really enthusiastically, I said, God, that's good.
It's a start.
It's really good.
It's a good start.
He goes, it's a start?
It's a start?
It's a, you know, it's a fucking start.
You know, so sometimes I'm best leaving my finger off the buttons.
I see.
Even with non-singers like Jeffrey and Brad?
Yeah, I mean, I loved – Brad says one of the funniest things I've ever heard in my life.
We were working on Tangled.
And the conductor on that session, B.A. Huffman, his name is.
He's a little short guy.
He was completely bald.
And he happened to be wearing sort of a gold outfit that day.
And he happened to be wearing sort of a gold outfit that day.
And he was conducting Brad, who's really tall, and B.A.'s in front of him, and Brad goes,
I don't know whether to follow him or thank the Academy.
You're a funny guy.
Cracked.
He was so, so, so, so funny.
cracked.
He was so, so, so, so funny.
But, you know, I remember Danny DeVito was singing the
Philokites part, Phil,
in Hercules.
He was like, you know,
I'm down to one last...
I just needed to get
one image, so I said,
Danny,
think
Jimmy Durante, which is that, I'm down, too.
Just that one image did it.
Oh, that's great.
So just like Howard, when he could barely speak, told Pedro, he couldn't even come into the studio anymore because the neuropathies had robbed him of everything.
And she was singing, new and a bit alarming.
And Howard wanted much more of the quotes around alarming, but he didn't want to use the words.
He said, everyone had to get very quiet.
And Howard said, tell Paige on new and a bit alarming.
Tell her it's dry sand.
Oh, new and a bit alarming.
And that was just that one note.
Wow.
Nailed it.
So for me now, it's a matter of
if I can come in and make that one adjustment
that needs to be made, great.
But then when it comes to nuts and bolts, I think I'm best stepping back.
I love that you all speak this language.
A little bit of that, a little bit of Durante here, a little bit of Streisand there.
Yeah, yeah.
And they get it.
It's all part of a vocabulary.
The vocabulary of music, the vocabulary of performances.
You want to do a kind of performance.
It's always, I get it.
Oh, I get what you're doing.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
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You always hear
these stories
of composers who
are dreaming, and they
dream of a melody and
wake up.
And has that ever happened to you?
Yeah, but they have to be great melodies.
I have dreamt, I dream a lot about that I'm working on a song,
but I don't usually solve a lot in terms of my writing in a dream.
I definitely have dreams where I see the future and I'll go,
you know, I met Janice in the dream. I knew who
she was years before I met her. Your wife. Yeah. Yeah. But yeah, I do write songs in my dreams.
You know, I often have this dream where I'm playing a concert, you know, and I'm playing,
and then I realize in the dream that everyone has lost interest. They sort of walked out
of the theater and I'm still playing.
And I'm going, oh, no.
Anyway.
Here's another slightly painful question, Alan, that comes from our engineer, John Murray.
Is there a song that got cut from something that was an unkind cut, something that really hurt?
So even if you see the film now, you go, oh, why isn't that song still in there? It belongs. Okay. Good question. Good question.
Good question, John and Samantha. The basic answer is no. At the end of the day, the best
song wins and it will win. In Sister Act, there was a song
that we changed radically
between London and New York, and
I was happier with what we had in London.
The director was happier with
what we had in New York.
But it worked. It was fine.
So at the end of the day,
I just go, okay.
Now, I do have songs like Proud of Your Boy,
which was cut from aladdin because
the character of the mother was cut and it's one of howard's of my best songs but it's found its
way of course into the um the broadway show of aladdin uh a song called shooting star was the
first song we wrote for hercules to sing before we wrote go the Distance. It was a beautiful song, but very different in tone.
So I understand absolutely why we made those changes, those cuts.
What's the one that Howard, in the documentary,
I'm trying to remember, that Katzenberg wanted to cut?
Was it part of your world?
Yeah, it was part of your world.
And Howard said, over my dead body?
Yeah, believe me.
I mean, if we hadn't come up with the solution we came up with,
Howard's dead body would have been there for Jeffrey,
and Jeffrey would, you know.
But luckily, we came up with the idea that, of course, we needed to have the context of she's singing part of your world,
but in fact, this is a bad thing.
We don't want her to go there and do that.
So we're able to keep the attention of the younger part of the audience.
What's a song that you consider, I heard you talk too, about songs that let the lyrics shine?
Oh, Be Our Guest.
One of the most predictable pieces of music is...
It's a nothing, simple, simple piece of music.
But you put on top of it,
Be our guest, be our guest, put our service to the test.
Tie your napkin round your neck, sherry, and we'll provide the arrest.
Soup du jour, à l'auteur.
It just allows us bed for these brilliant lyrics to pop off of.
I love it. I heard you say, too, sometimes that some of your favorite songs, and it's always hard to pick favorite songs, and you've made that very, very clear, is some of the songs that you like to play are songs that were maybe less appreciated.
Maybe a song like Leap of Faith.
Yeah, sure, Leap of Faith.
appreciated. Maybe a song like Leap of Faith. Yeah, sure, Leap of Faith. I mean, I have a deep,
deep trunk of songs and shows that people haven't heard. Some of my best songs are just sitting,
you know, sort of submerged in that. When they opened the New Amsterdam Theater in New York,
Tim Rice and I wrote an oratorio called King David, which was very ambitious. It was the life of King David told in a huge two-act oratorio
with symphony orchestra and choirs.
And there's some beautiful, beautiful material in it.
But the context, it was like a meal that was just too rich.
And I still am working on it, you know,
pulling things out and trying to modulate it
so that the things that are strong about it will work.
And there's a lot of material in there that people have never heard.
And some they have heard.
But again, I don't get very attached to that stuff.
Because if I look at the Newsies example, I just go, you know, just wait long enough
and things come back.
That's interesting how that happens.
John is requesting, he's saying to me, yes, I would love to hear a song from The Trunk, if you have one in you.
I have to get the lyrics out.
Home is the hunter, high-flown and contented.
Home is my lover, all sins are repented.
All sins are repented Mobile expressions
Never again
Never again
Sorry about just the lyrics.
Was that supposed to be in Beauty and the Beast?
No, that was in King David.
In Leap of Faith is a ballad.
When I was just a kid, more than a bit naive,
I knew dreams could come true, especially if you believe.
Anyway, those songs, there's a trunk full of them.
It's hard for me to play them right now.
Those of us that love songwriting would love to peek into Alan Menken's trunk,
wouldn't we, Gilbert?
You know what?
I'll be glad to play you those songs.
We could do that share the screen thing sometime, and I'll play them for you.
We would love to hear them.
What do you mean, and I saw an interview with you on YouTube, were you talking about the importance of having fun
when you're composing a song? Getting out of your own way. Yeah. Letting it flow, letting it happen,
letting it, sometimes you say the music takes you in the direction that it wants to go in.
Absolutely. Okay, I like writing, I like, music is a flow. It's like a water, it's like a flow of water. You can,
you can put a, you know, a waterfall, whatever, you put your hands out, you could, you could
divert it. You could move it this way, you could move it that way, you could make it splash, you
could do, but what you can't do is stop it. It's going to go somewhere. And that's what we do. We,
we divert the flow, but the, but that flow, it sits in a key.
We do. We divert the flow, but that flow, it sits in a key.
I can move away from that key.
But then you know when I come back home.
Go someplace surprising. It's just, you let it flow, but you take people on a journey.
And you always have to stay ahead of them.
Beautiful.
And you always be specific about where you're taking them. I got a memory now out of nowhere
when we were talking earlier about songs
that don't belong in this scene,
and it's just a song of watching a TV production
of Jekyll and Hyde with Kirk Douglas.
Wow.
Yeah, where all of a sudden he and this girl,
he takes out a bicycle which i don't know
when that was in uh jekyll and hyde he takes out a bicycle and they sing this song i have a bicycle
and and it just it just looked like the composer had it sitting in his trunk and said, oh, let's use this. It could be. It could well be. I'd love to
see the scene in question so I could comment on it intelligently. It's all a matter of how you do
it and how you set it up. We lay pipe in order to set up song moments. You definitely lay pipe
so the story flows into the song, leads to the song, the song elevates and
moves story forward, and then you continue with dialogue. And that interrelationship is crucial.
You're like an architect of sorts. Exactly what you are. We are architects. We design a house
that other people are going to live in. That's fascinating. And when they live in that house,
the house has to be constructed really strongly so they can, if they want to repaint it, they'll repaint it, but the house
will still stand. If they want to even maybe adjust the room, we create a structure, a vocabulary,
and a way of storytelling that is a structure that actors will live in and musicians will live in
and designers will live in. That's great.
Alan,
you've been very generous with your time as we wind down one question from a
listener.
If I could,
Jonathan Sloman says,
what can Alan tell us about the unproduced two frame Roger Rabbit prequel
and the songs he wrote for it?
Oh,
wow.
Um,
these are deep dives.
These people do.
This would have been, it's it i think it would
have been a lot of fun uh-huh um a lot of fun glenn slater it was my first collaboration with
glenn slater um and we wrote i think three songs um one actually uh uh has gotten out a little bit.
Oh, God, what's it called?
Maybe Jonathan Sloan.
Jonathan, if you know what the title is.
We'll ask Jonathan.
Oh, it's called This Only Happens in the Movies.
Okay.
It was just going to be so expensive, unfortunately, to make that movie.
I think that was so the it, the plug got pulled,
it never happened. That's too bad. Okay, I lied, a second question from a listener.
Greetings from New Rochelle, David Wachtenheim. It's your hometown, is it?
Yes, it is. Love your work, I'm a huge fan. Now,
you've worked with so many lyricists. Do you ever find yourself tailoring your music to match a
particular style of that lyricist, or is everything just dictated by the subject matter?
Oh, no.
When I wrote A Whole New World, I tailored it to Tim.
I was thinking about some of the work at Evita
when I wrote A Whole New World.
Another beautiful love song.
Yeah.
Thank you.
You've got so many.
Oh, thanks.
There are occasional times I will do that.
More and more, I'm writing music first these days.
But, you know, again, every collaboration with every lyricist and every project, they're all different.
And you try not to be inflexible about how you work because that's death.
You want to always be reinventing yourself.
And I'm going to push you to work again.
And can you play a little and sing Brent Like Me? Thank you. Sir, what will your pleasure be? Let me take that honor down to death. You ain't never had a friend like me.
Thank you.
Fantastic.
Thank you.
I want to hear you sing it next time, Gilbert.
Gilbert, can we get a copy of your version from the Tiki Room to Alan so he can hear it?
Oh, yeah.
I bet it's on YouTube.
I probably can find it on YouTube.
Alan, what's coming up as you work under lockdown, as you work under these less than ideal conditions?
It's a ton. We have the sequel to Enchanted. We start filming in about two months.
Disenchanted? We're calling it Disenchanted for the moment. We'll see. That's the working title.
Okay. Obviously, the Little Mermaid live action movie is now back filming after the pandemic and rob marshall
allowed me a little peek into it in london just today in fact a new animated with john lassiter's
new company called spellbound uh-huh a a beauty prequel basically the backstory of LeFou and Gaston,
and that's for Disney+,
the stage musical of Hercules,
which we did in Central Park last year.
We did it at the Delacorte Theater,
and a stage musical of Night at the Museum.
So you got nothing going on, and you're looking for work?
Yeah.
Gil, I saved this for last. One of your
favorite movies. Here's a wild card for Alan. One of your favorite movies you revealed on this very
show is The Apprenticeship of Doody Kravitz. Ah. Did you know there's an Alan Menken connection?
Wow. Did you know I wrote a musical of The Apprenticeship of Doody Kravitz?
No. I'll send it to you, right? I'll send it to you ASAP.
apprenticeship with Donnie Kravitz?
No.
I'll send it to you, right?
I'll send it to you ASAP.
Look for your check in your mailbox, Gil.
Well, no, obviously I'll send you a link.
Get me Gilbert's email address.
Well, wait, I have somebody's email address involved with the show and I'll send it to you, Gilbert.
Because on this show, sometimes we'll recommend movies to see
and I recommended The Apprenticeship with Duddy Kravitz.
I will show you the, I have a cast album here somewhere.
It's good. It's very good.
As a musical, it's a tough story because Duddy is this kid who's,
you know, this Jewish kid who's really ambitious,
and he wants to please his father, but he also screws over a bunch of people.
And it's it's a delicate subject matter.
But, yeah, I'm really proud of that musical.
And I work with a man named David Spencer.
And I will send it to you.
Thank you.
There you go, Gil.
There you go.
And one compliment for you, Gilbert, going back and watching Aladdin, which I did again to do
the research for Alan, I'd forgotten
what a terrific actor you are.
So good. Oh, thanks.
So there. And I told Dara, but I said
don't tell him, he'll get a swelled head, but I'm telling you.
Oh, God. So many
classics. He's got so many great moments.
Yeah, they are great. They are great.
Yeah. See, I'm a great
actor, so fuck you for not writing me a solo.
I said, get a grip.
Get a grip.
Get a grip.
You're young, Gil.
Get a grip.
Get a grip.
Get a grip.
Get a grip.
Jafar!
Get a grip. Get a grip Jafar Get a grip Get a grip
Alan Macon has the best party tricks in the world
Okay
Alan, this was great
So Gil, we'll do a sign-off
and let this man get on with his 27 projects
Alan, thank you for so many years of entertainment.
My pleasure.
You've made us so happy, and you've made so many millions happy, and we're glad we finally got you
here.
Nice to meet you, and great to see you again, Gilbert.
Oh, well, great seeing you again, Alan. And this has been Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast with my co-host, Frank Santopadre,
and the legendary Alan Menken, who I know from Aladdin.
A real treat for us.
Thank you, gentlemen.
Thank you.
It was fun.
You ain't never had a friend like me
Yeah
Curse
What?