Timon and Pumba are
an animated meerkat and warthog duo introduced in Disney's
1994 animated film The Lion King.
Timon was portrayed through his many appearances by Nathan Lane (in
all three films and early episodes of the show), Max Casella (the
original actor in The Lion King Broadway
musical), Kevin Schon (in certain episodes of the show), Quinton
Flynn (in certain episodes of the show), Bruce Lanoil in
the Wild About Safety shorts
and Kingdom Hearts II, and
while Pumbaa is voiced by Ernie Sabella (in all of his animated
speaking appearances), and was portrayed by Tom Alan Robbins in the
original cast of the Broadway musical. In the upcoming live-action remake,
the characters will be portrayed by Billy Eichner and Seth Rogen respectively. Nathan Lane and Ernie Sabella first came to
audition for the roles of the hyenas, but when the producers saw how well they
worked together they decided to cast them as Timon and Pumbaa. Lyricist Tim
Rice however was pulling for Rik Mayall (for Timon) and Adrian
Edmondson (for Pumbaa) to play the roles, as he got the idea for the
lyrics to "Hakuna Matata" by watching their show Bottom.
As with many characters in Lion King, Pumbaa's name derives from
the East African language Swahili. In Swahili, pumbaa (v.) means "to
be foolish, silly, weakminded, careless, negligent". Timon is one of the few characters whose name
has no meaning in Swahili; Timon is a historical Greek name, taken
to mean "he who respects". Timon's name may also possibly derive from Shakespeare's
tragedy Timon of Athens,
another Shakespeare reference in a film which derives its plot from Hamlet.
Timon is a wise-cracking and self-absorbed
meerkat who is known for claiming Pumbaa's ideas as his own, while Pumbaa has
flatulence issues. However, Pumbaa is also a fierce warrior, charging into
battle like a battering ram, and taking great offense if anyone who's not his
friend calls him a pig, at which point he exclaims "They call me Mister pig!"—a reference to
Sidney Poitier's line "They call me Mister Tibbs!" from the 1967 film In the Heat of the Night. Unlike real
meerkats, Timon can walk on his hind legs, while in real life, meerkats walk on
all four legs and can only stand on
their hind ones. In the wild, banded mongoose have a special relationship with
warthogs, which is portrayed in the Disney film.
Комментариев нет:
Отправить комментарий