Two quick notes. I’ve done the Tokyo Tiki Room many times. It’s not anywhere near as fun or engaging as the original version. It gets old really fast. Disney needs to stop messing with good originals.
And having just experienced the Country Bears for the first time live since the redo - I cannot imagine a worse show. It was a terrible redo, and worse, it was a boring show. I hated everything about it. I left the theater mad. It wasn’t just bad, it was horrendous. Even the rest of the audience didn’t seem to vibe with it. The parents in the room kept trying to get their kids to engage by telling them where the songs came from, but it never connected with anyone. When parents have to coax their kids into enjoying something that was re-written specifically for them, it’s bad. I’d rather have just seen the whole thing close completely.
Clearly, you’re entitled to your opinion and your interpretation of the room.
I’ve seen it several times now, including twice last week, and I love it. It is much tighter than the most recent version. The most recent version hasn’t been the original in a long time, since it was chopped up. Most notably, my boys on the wall seemed to have a disjointed part in the old version. Now they are fully integrated once again and make more sense.
I don’t know half the songs, and I don’t care. I didn’t know any of the songs in the last one before I saw the show.
“Blood on the saddle“ was perfectly replaced.
The songs were good choices in my opinion, and the ones I did know landed very well. I’ve yet to see a showing without audience clapping when “You’ve got a friend in me” comes on.
The characters have a more modern country vibe with the sequins and all. OK, they are in frontierland, so I don’t know that technically fits, but it is relatable to modern audiences. If we’re being picky, bears can’t sing or play instruments, either.
I see just as much engagement as the old one, no more no less, from my visits. Sometimes it depends on how crowded the theater is, sometimes it depends on one family getting into it and getting the clapping started, and everyone else joins in.
This was an excellent move. This was an excellent business decision. Probably not too costly, completely revamped a beloved show while maintaining the integrity of individual characters and the show itself. Well done. Bravo.