"A brilliant book with insightful information that will benefit scholarly and public discourse about Disney for the coming years. There are endless benefits that come from this study for future works on The Walt Disney Company, especially providing historical and business theory for insights into their cultural momentum and the layperson's entertaining read."— International Journal of Disney Studies"Staging a Comeback tells a fascinating, complex story of corporate ambition, artistic vision, and theatrical collaboration. Kunze brilliantly reveals how the interdependence of theater and animation, New York City and theme parks, Hollywood producers and Broadway musical theater artists enabled Disney's breathtaking success."— Stacy Wolf, author of Beyond Broadway: The Pleasure and Promise of Musical Theatre across America"Peter Kunze's Staging a Comeback brings a fresh perspective to the Disney 'renaissance' of the 1980s and '90s. He examines these films' historical connection to the theatricality, anthropomorphic performance, and mediated liveness of classic animation. The book is also noteworthy for the author's innovative research methods, in light of the studio's reluctance to open up to independent scholarship. Kunze shows that if you can't enter the castle over the moat, you can storm it by way of the ramparts."— Donald Crafton, author of Shadow of a Mouse: Performance, Belief, and World-Making in Animation"A brilliant book with insightful information that will benefit scholarly and public discourse about Disney for the coming years. There are endless benefits that come from this study for future works on The Walt Disney Company, especially providing historical and business theory for insights into their cultural momentum and the layperson's entertaining read."— International Journal of Disney Studies"Staging a Comeback tells a fascinating, complex story of corporate ambition, artistic vision, and theatrical collaboration. Kunze brilliantly reveals how the interdependence of theater and animation, New York City and theme parks, Hollywood producers and Broadway musical theater artists enabled Disney's breathtaking success."— Stacy Wolf, author of Beyond Broadway: The Pleasure and Promise of Musical Theatre across America"Peter Kunze's Staging a Comeback brings a fresh perspective to the Disney 'renaissance' of the 1980s and '90s. He examines these films' historical connection to the theatricality, anthropomorphic performance, and mediated liveness of classic animation. The book is also noteworthy for the author's innovative research methods, in light of the studio's reluctance to open up to independent scholarship. Kunze shows that if you can't enter the castle over the moat, you can storm it by way of the ramparts."— Donald Crafton, author of Shadow of a Mouse: Performance, Belief, and World-Making in Animation"Staging a Comeback tells a fascinating, complex story of corporate ambition, artistic vision, and theatrical collaboration. Kunze brilliantly reveals how the interdependence of theater and animation, New York City and theme parks, Hollywood producers and Broadway musical theater artists enabled Disney's breathtaking success."— Stacy Wolf, author of Beyond Broadway: The Pleasure and Promise of Musical Theatre across America"A brilliant book with insightful information that will benefit scholarly and public discourse about Disney for the coming years. There are endless benefits that come from this study for future works on The Walt Disney Company, especially providing historical and business theory for insights into their cultural momentum and the layperson's entertaining read."— International Journal of Disney Studies"Peter Kunze's Staging a Comeback brings a fresh perspective to the Disney 'renaissance' of the 1980s and '90s. He examines these films' historical connection to the theatricality, anthropomorphic performance, and mediated liveness of classic animation. The book is also noteworthy for the author's innovative research methods, in light of the studio's reluctance to open up to independent scholarship. Kunze shows that if you can't enter the castle over the moat, you can storm it by way of the ramparts."— Donald Crafton, author of Shadow of a Mouse: Performance, Belief, and World-Making in Animation