Four giant rolling stages move in from two directions as costumed performers and colorful props sail through the air above the audience. Guests sit in triangular sections labeled elephant, giraffe, warthog and lion.
To the right, Simba is a giant animated figure, 12 feet high, sitting atop Pride Rock. To the left is Elephant Waterfall, where a playful pachyderm spouts water from his swaying trunk. Another stage is dominated by a swaying giraffe and a fourth is the jungle stage where Pumba and Timon reside.
Singers in African tribal robes open the show with a rousing chorus of "I Just Cant Wait to be King." The center stage doubles as a trampoline for costumed aerial performers portraying a troop of acrobatic monkeys flying through a happy rendition of "Hakuna Matata." "Be Prepared" sets the theme for a mock battle of tribal warriors on stilts.
A high-wire aerialist and her dance partner hit the high notes dressed as giant birds in a love duet that literally soars to the tune of "Can You Feel the Love Tonight?" The show comes full circle with a full chorus of "The Circle of Life" followed by audience participation in competing groups for "The Lion Sleeps Tonight." The shows 50 performers return for the rousing finale of a medley of songs from the film.
The 28-minute performance is staged at least eight times daily in Camp Minnie-Mickey.
"Pocahontas and Her Forest Friends" -- Is there really one animal that can save Americas forests and the animals who live there from destruction? Native American legend says there is. But which one? Grandmother Willow says, "You must ask the animals." And Pocahontas sets out to help her.
This is the intriguing storyline of "Pocahontas and Her Forest Friends," where live forest animals take the stage in a nature grove to demonstrate how they can help. Based on characters from the Walt Disney film, "Pocahontas," the stage show makes use of music from the film as background for the intimate stage show. Theres a prickly porcupine, a possum, a raccoon, a rabbit, wild turkey and an energetic skunk.
Theres even a very large snake, another of the friends Pocahontas brings on stage to help younger audience members learn more about their animal neighbors.
In the end, Grandmother Willow and Pocahontas and all her friends learn that the only animals who can save the forests are -- you guessed it -- humans.
The 12-minute show is presented up to 10 times daily in the tree-shaded 400-seat Grandmother Willows Grove.

