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Essay on Aurora Princess Pls Pls Plz plz plz pls pls pls pls pls ​

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Answered by Anonymous
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Princess Aurora, also known as Sleeping Beauty or Briar Rose,is a fictional character who appears in Walt Disney Productions' 16th animated feature film Sleeping Beauty (1959). Originally voiced by singer Mary Costa, Aurora is the only child of King Stefan and Queen Leah. An evil fairy named Maleficent seeks revenge for not being invited to Aurora's christening and curses the newborn princess, foretelling that she will die before the sun sets on her sixteenth birthday by pricking her finger on the spindle of a spinning wheel. Determined to prevent this, three good fairies raise Aurora as a peasant in order to protect her, patiently awaiting her sixteenth birthday — the day the spell can only be broken by a kiss from her true love, Prince Phillip.

Answered by BrokenJoystick
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Sleeping Beauty (1959 film)

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Sleeping Beauty is a 1959 American animated musical fantasy film produced by Walt Disney based on Sleeping Beauty by Charles Perrault. The 16th Disney animated feature film, it was released to theaters on January 29, 1959, by Buena Vista Distribution. This was the last Disney adaptation of a fairy tale for some years; the studio did not return to the genre until 30 years later, after Walt Disney died in 1966, with the release of The Little Mermaid (1989).

Sleeping Beauty

Sleeping beauty disney.jpg

Original theatrical poster

Directed by

Clyde Geronimi (supervising)

Eric Larson

Wolfgang Reitherman

Les Clark

Produced by

Walt Disney

Written by

Erdman Penner

Story by

Milt Banta

Winston Hibler

Bill Peet

Joe Rinaldi

Ted Sears

Ralph Wright

Based on

Sleeping Beauty

by Charles Perrault

Starring

Mary Costa

Bill Shirley

Eleanor Audley

Verna Felton

Barbara Luddy

Barbara Jo Allen

Taylor Holmes

Bill Thompson

Narrated by

Marvin Miller

Music by

George Bruns (adapted from Tchaikovsky's Sleeping Beauty Ballet)

Edited by

Roy M. Brewer Jr.

Donald Halliday

Production

company

Walt Disney Productions

Distributed by

Buena Vista Distribution

Release date

January 29, 1959

[1]

Running time

75 minutes

Country

United States

Language

English

Budget

$6 million[2]

Box office

$51.6 million (United States/Canada)[3]

It features the voices of Mary Costa, Eleanor Audley, Verna Felton, Barbara Luddy, Barbara Jo Allen, Bill Shirley, Taylor Holmes, and Bill Thompson.

The film was directed by Les Clark, Eric Larson, and Wolfgang Reitherman, under the supervision of Clyde Geronimi, with additional story work by Joe Rinaldi, Winston Hibler, Bill Peet, Ted Sears, Ralph Wright, and Milt Banta. The film's musical score and songs, featuring the work of the Graunke Symphony Orchestra under the direction of George Bruns, are arrangements or adaptations of numbers from the 1890 Sleeping Beauty ballet by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.

Sleeping Beauty was the first animated film to be photographed in the Super Technirama 70 widescreen process, as well as the second full-length animated feature film to be filmed in anamorphic widescreen, following Disney's Lady and the Tramp four years earlier. The film was presented in Super Technirama 70 and 6-channel stereophonic sound in the first-run engagements. Initially, the film received mixed reviews and underperformed at the box office, though reception improved over time. In 2019, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[4]

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Last edited 18 hours ago by Monkbot

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