| Synopsis
Act 1
On
a cold winter night, an old beggar woman comes upon a glorious
castle belonging to a young prince. She asks the master of the
castle to allow her to stay the night, away from the cold, and
in return she would give him a single rose, but the prince was
vain and uncaring and turned her away solely for her appearance.
As he did this, she warned him not to be fooled by appearances,
as true beauty lies within, only to be rejected again. Seeing
his horrible heart for what it truly was, she transformed into
a beautiful enchantress and turned the prince into a hideous Beast
and his servants into different objects. She gave him the rose
to use as an hour-glass. The one way he could break the spell
was to learn to love another and earn her love in return by the
time the last petal fell…
Years
later, a beautiful young woman named Belle makes her way into
town one morning in order to get a book from the local book keeper.
On the way she expresses her wish to live in a world like her
books, full of adventure, while the townspeople note her unparalleled
beauty but find her love of books odd (“Belle”). Belle
has also attracted the attentions of Gaston (the local hunter
and town hero) who admires her only for her beauty and not her
brains.
Belle,
however, is not oblivious to her peers’ views of her. She
voices her concerns about it to her father, Maurice, an eccentric
inventor, assures his daughter that she is anything but strange
and he will always love her (“No Matter What”). The
two then put the finishing touches on his invention and Maurice
heads off to an invention fair donning a scarf knitted for him
by Belle (“No Matter What (Reprise)”).
In
the woods, Maurice becomes lost when a pack of wolves attacks
him; he finds his way to a mysterious castle on the edge of the
Crossroads and enters. The servants (Lumière, a maître
d' turned into a candelabra, Cogsworth, the head of household
turned into a clock, Babette, a maid turned into a feather duster
that still seems to retain her flirtatious tendencies, and Mrs.
Potts, the head of the kitchen turned into a tea pot) welcome
him but the castle’s master, a horrid Beast, arrives and
orders Maurice to be locked away for trespassing.
Back
in town Gaston proposes to Belle, which she politely rejects (“Me”).
Appalled by Gaston’s forwardness, Belle once again voices
her need for a life outside this provincial one (“Belle
(Reprise)”). Gaston’s sidekick, LeFou, returns from
the woods in a familiar scarf. Belle realizes her father is in
danger and heads into the woods to look for him. She ends up at
the castle were she finds her father locked away in a dungeon.
She makes a deal with the Beast, Maurice goes free but she remains
in his stead. They agree and Maurice is sent back to town without
being allowed to say goodbye. Belle is given a guest room and
ordered by the Beast to join him for dinner. She mourns her situation
(“Home”), but Mrs. Potts and Madame de la Grande Bouche,
an operatic wardrobe, attempt to cheer her up (“Home (Reprise)”).
Back
in town, Gaston sulks at his loss of a bride. Lefou and the patrons
attempt to cheer him up (“Gaston”), when Maurice rushes
in claiming a Beast has Belle locked away, they laugh at him but
Gaston formulates a plan (“Gaston (Reprise)”). Back
at the castle, the Beast grows impatient as Belle has yet to join
him for dinner. Cogsworth informs him she refuses to come, after
a shouting match between Belle and the Beast (which ends in a
victory for Belle) he tells her if she cannot eat with him then
she will not eat at all. In his quarters, he sulks and notes his
fate should the spell not break (“How Long Must This Go
On?”). Eventually Belle does become hungry and ventures
into the kitchen where the servants offer her dinner despite their
master’s orders. They treat her to an amazing cabaret show
(“Be Our Guest”).
After
dinner, Belle gets a tour of the castle courtesy of Cogsworth
and Lumiere, her curiosity leads her to enter the West Wing, a
place the Beast told her was forbidden. Mesmerized by a mysterious
rose floating in a bell jar, she reaches out to touch it but before
she can, the Beast stops her and orders her to get out and rips
her sleeve in the process. Appalled that he has touched her she
flees the castle fearing for her life. Realizing his deadly mistake
the Beast knows he will be a monster forever if he cannot learn
to love her (“If I Can’t Love Her”).
Act 2
In
the woods, Belle is attacked by wolves and is only rescued when
the Beast comes to her aid, but he is injured during the fight
and Belle helps him back to the castle instead of taking the chance
to run home. She cleans his injuries and after a brief argument
about whose fault this is, the Beast thanks her for her kindness
and thus their friendship is born. Wanting to give her a thank-you
gift, the Beast gives Belle his huge library, which excites her.
She notes a change in the Beast’s personality as the servants
note a change in Belle and the Beast’s relationship (“Something
There”). They express their hope of being human once more
(“Human Again”) while Belle asks the Beast to accompany
her to dinner that night.
Back
in the village, Gaston meets with the asylum owner Monsieur D’Arque.
They plan to lock Maurice away to blackmail Belle into marrying
Gaston (“Maison des Lunes”). In the castle, the Beast
and Belle attend a lovely dinner and personal ball, where they
dance together in the ballroom (“Beauty and the Beast”).
After, the Beast (who plans to tell Belle he loves her) asks her
if she is happy here, she responds positively but notes that she
misses her father. He offers her his Magic Mirror to view him:
he is sick and lost in the woods. The Beast allows Belle to leave
in order to save him; she departs after a tearful goodbye (“If
I Can’t Love Her (Reprise)”).
Belle
finds her father and brings him back to their house in the village.
After she is able to nurse him back to health she explains the
transformation she seems to have gone through while with the Beast
(“A Change In Me”). A mob arrives, led by Gaston to
take Maurice to the asylum. Belle proves her father’s sanity
by showing the townspeople the Beast is real using the Magic Mirror
but doesn’t realize the error in her gesture. The townspeople
immediately fear the Beast, but Belle insists he’s gentle
and kind. Gaston catches her tone and recognizes the Beast as
his rival for Belle’s affections and organizes the mob to
kill the Beast (“The Mob Song”).
At
the castle, the objects are able to keep the lynch mob at bay
but Gaston breaks through and finds the Beast in his tower. He
engages in a fight with him, mercilessly beating him and taunting
him. The Beast has lost the will to live at Belle’s departure
and Gaston moves in for the killing blow when Belle arrives, the
Beast immediately turns on Gaston but spares his life. The Beast
and Belle are reunited just as Gaston plunges his dagger into
the Beast’s back but loses his footing and falls to his
death.
On
the balcony Belle assures the Beast he will live but they both
know she is helpless to save him. She begs him not to leave her
because she has found home in his company (“Home - Reprise”),
but despite this, he dies; Belle sobs on his body and says she
loves him just before the last petal falls. A transformation takes
place and the Beast is alive and human once more. Though Belle
does not recognize him at first, she looks into his eyes and sees
the Beast within and they kiss. The two sing of how their lives
have changed because of love and they dance once more as the company,
now changed back to their human form, gathers in the ballroom
(“Transformation/Finale").
Musical
Numbers
Act I
* Overture— Orchestra
* Prologue— Orchestra
* Belle — Belle, Gaston, Silly Girls and Townspeople
* No Matter What— Maurice and Belle
* No Matter What (Reprise)/Wolf Chase— Maurice
* Me— Gaston
* Belle (Reprise) — Belle
* Home— Belle
* Home (Reprise) Mrs. Potts
* Gaston— Lefou, Gaston, Silly Girls and Tavern Patrons
* Gaston (Reprise)— Gaston and Lefou
* How Long Must This Go On?— Beast
* Be Our Guest— Lumiere, Mrs. Potts, and Enchanted Objects,
Ensemble
* If I Can't Love Her— Beast
Act
II
* Entr'acte/Wolf Chase— Orchestra
* Something There— Belle, Beast, Lumiere, Mrs. Potts
and Cogsworth
* Human Again— Lumiere, Madame de la Grande Bouche,
Cogsworth, Mrs. Potts, Babette, Chip and Enchanted Objects, Ensemble
* Maison Des Lunes— Gaston, Lefou and Monsieur D'Arque
* Beauty and the Beast — Mrs. Potts
* If I Can't Love Her (Reprise)— Beast
* A Change In Me— Belle
* The Mob Song— Gaston, Townspeople, Ensemble
* The Battle - Orchestra
* Transformation— Beast and Belle
* Beauty and the Beast (Reprise) — Company
|