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Bill Condon

The Hollywood Reporter

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March 10 - 17, 2017

The Beauty and the Beast director on why musicals are back (thanks, La La!), how Disney approached the remake and who makes Julian Assange crazy

- Gregg Kilday

Bill Condon

A longtime fan of movie musicals, Bill Condon wasn’t fazed when Disney entrusted him with turning the 1991 animated Beauty and the Beast into a $160 million live action movie starring Emma Watson and Dan Stevens (opening March 17). But transferring the hand-drawn classic into a 3D world took nearly three years, requiring six months of R&D before preproduction even began. “There was a lot of trial and error,” he admits.

A New York City native, Condon, 61, graduated from Columbia University with a degree in philosophy before heading to Los Angeles, where he planned to enroll in UCLA’s film school. Instead, he found a job with producer-director Michael Laughlin, for whom he wrote the early ’80s sci-fi tales Strange Behavior and Strange Invaders, before eventually directing his breakthrough movie, 1998’s Gods and Monsters, for which he won a best adapted screenplay Oscar.

Condon and his longtime partner Jack Morrissey, who works with him as his co-producer, divide their time between New York (where Condon edits his films) and Los Angeles. The director spoke with THR about why audiences are now more receptive to musicals, how Disney approached the Beauty and the Beast remake and what he learned about Julian Assange while directing the 2013 biopic The Fifth Estate.

When you wrote Chicago and directed Dreamgirls, you were careful to provide a reason for why the characters were singing in case audiences weren’t ready for a full-fledged musical. So how has your thinking changed?

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