Billboard Kids
Kindergarten is a big life step for any kid. For many, itâs their first time away from home and their parents, itâs when they learn the alphabet and itâs when they get to experience making friends for the first time.
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Thatâs why the formative year was the inspiration behind Disneyâs freshly released series, Kindergarten: The Musical, which follows the story of 5-year-old Berti and her new friends as they navigate life at school. âWe were all kids once,â one of the showâs creators and executive producers, Michelle Lewis, tells Billboard.
Her fellow series creator and executive producer, Charlton Pettus, agrees. âWeâre both parents. Real kids are so much more interesting than most people. Weâre telling super fun stories about people we know extraordinarily well, having raised bunches of them.â
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Charlton Pettus, Kay Hanley, Dan Petty, Michelle Lewis and Tom Warburton.
Courtesy of Disney
Lewis and Pettus are longtime co-creatives, as they worked as producers, songwriters and musicians for decades. Lewis is a two-time Emmy Award winner who has written for Cher, Amy Grant, Little Mix and more. Sheâs also worked on a number of animated childrenâs shows, including Doc McStuffins, Vampirina and Bubble Guppies.
Since 2000, Pettus has been a touring guitarist, producer and cowriter for Tears for Fears, and has also worked with artists including Hilary Duff, Lindsay Lohan and Selena Gomez. However, Kindergarten: The Musical marks his first time working on a television show. âItâs so much better,â he says of working in television. âIn the darkest days of pop songwriting, [Lewis and I] were in that period where the mission was to write songs that sounded like they were about something, but assiduously avoided ever actually being about something. So, I think we got a little burnt on the chase.â
He noted that âTV and film seemed much more fun, so we started dabbling in that,â before adding, âWe had a couple shows we were trying to pitch. Kindergarten came up as a back pocket pitch. We thought it was clever and kind of fun. As as we went out in the world and talked to people, this was the one that that people reacted to.â
However, music is hardly left on the back burner on Kindergarten: The Musical, as the name suggests. Lewis calls the series a âlove letter to musicâ and its unifying nature. âWe have a song called âI Want to Go Homeâ in the show,â she says as an example. âItâs about being in school and they miss home, they miss their dog, whatever. What would seem like a tiny moment, for a little kid is actually a big moment, and big enough for them to sing. I hope that the show makes kids feel seen and heard, celebrated and comfortable with expressing those things, those fears and anxieties and joys and all that stuff through music.â
Pettus concludes, âWhy do songs make us cry? Because we recognize ourselves. It resonates. I think we just want to do the same thing with kids. We want them to recognize themselves, see themselves, and see that it works out, that itâs all okay.â
Kindergarten: The Musical is available to watch on Disney Jr. and Disney+. Check out a clip of the song, âFirst Day,â exclusively via Billboard below.
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The Descendants franchise returns next month, and in a music video premiering exclusively on Billboard below, the latest Villain Kid is caught red-handed.
Descendants: The Rise of Red â coming to Disney+ on July 12 before making its Disney Channel debut on Aug. 9 â introduces Kylie Cantrall (High School Musical: The Musical: The Series) as Red, the daughter of the Queen of Hearts (Rita Ora) from Alice in Wonderland. The new video is for Cantrallâs signature song, simply titled âRed,â which sees her character evading the Wonderland soldiers (including Alex Bonielloâs singing guard) protecting her queen mother as she skulks around in the shadows of the castle grounds.
âIâm on a path of destruction, this is gonna be fun,â Cantrall sings with a glint in her eye, wearing a bedazzled hood and red eye mask covered in hearts and throwing a red balloon filled with blood-red paint at a giant portrait of her tyrannical mom.
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ââRedâ is one of my favorite numbers in the film,â Cantrall tells Billboard of the original song. âItâs this explosive number â itâs bold and itâs fierce, kind of who Red is. It gives people a really cool look inside Wonderland and the trouble and mischief that Red gets up to when the lights go down and the village goes to sleep, she roams around the town and gets to be free and do her thing. The song shows who she is at her core and will give the audience a chance to really get to know her.â
In The Rise of Red â the fourth film in the Descendants franchise and the first since 2021âs The Royal Wedding â Cantrallâs Red teams up with Chloe (Malia Baker), the daughter of Cinderella (Brandy, reprising the role almost 30 years later), to travel back in time and try to prevent the Queen of Heartsâ evil reign.
In addition to the music video, fans can find âRedâ on Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music and other digital platforms, and the filmâs soundtrack is available for pre-order and pre-add via Walt Disney Records.
Descendants: The Rise of Red is directed by Jennifer Phang, with a script from Dan Frey and Russell Sommer, and executive-produced by Suzanne Todd and Gary Marsh. The movie is choreographed by Ashley Wallen (The Greatest Showman) with a score by Torin Borrowdale (Searching).
Watch the âRedâ video premiere below before the movie hits Disney+ on July 12.
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