Multi-platinum and global award-winning artist Florence + The Machine, is set to perform a new original song, “Call me Cruella,” in Disney’s all-new live action film “Cruella.” “Call me Cruella” will be featured in the film and on the original motion picture soundtrack and the original score album. Both albums, from Walt Disney Records, will be available on the 21st of May. Experience the film in cinemas or order it on Disney+ with Premier Access for a one-time additional fee on May 28.
On the “Call me Cruella” collaboration, Florence said, “Some of the first songs I ever learned how to sing were Disney songs. And the villains often got the best numbers. So to help create and perform a song for ‘Cruella’ is the fulfillment of a long held childhood dream. I’m so grateful to Nicholas Brittell and Disney for allowing me so much creative freedom, and for trusting me with Cruella’s beautiful madness.”
10 May 2021
Share with:
Multi-platinum and global award-winning artist Florence + The Machine, is set to perform a new original song, “Call me Cruella,” in Disney’s all-new live action film “Cruella.” “Call me Cruella” will be featured in the film and on the original motion picture soundtrack and the original score album. Both albums, from Walt Disney Records, will be available on the 21st of May. Experience the film in cinemas or order it on Disney+ with Premier Access for a one-time additional fee on May 28.
On the “Call me Cruella” collaboration, Florence said, “Some of the first songs I ever learned how to sing were Disney songs. And the villains often got the best numbers. So to help create and perform a song for ‘Cruella’ is the fulfillment of a long held childhood dream. I’m so grateful to Nicholas Brittell and Disney for allowing me so much creative freedom, and for trusting me with Cruella’s beautiful madness.”
Cruella de Vil, kidnapper of dogs, queen of the sewers. At least, that’s
Glenn Close‘s pitch for a
101 Dalmatians sequel starring her Cruella, which the Oscar-nominated actress recently said she would be happy to reprise. You know, when we’re done with Emma Stone’s
cool punk-rock Cruella.
Was there any live-action villain more fabulous than Glenn Close’s Cruella de Vil? Over the top and camp in the best way, Close vamped it up as the
101 Dalmatians villain in the 1996 live-action remake and 2000 sequel,
102 Dalmatians. Close set the standard for family-friendly Disney villains, so much so that her depiction of the villain would go on to inspire Disney’s upcoming “prequel”
How did Cruella de Vil begin? The question no one was asking will soon be answered in
Cruella, the punk-rock take on the
101 Dalmatians villain starring
Emma Stone. And at least one part of that answer is revealed in a new
Cruella teaser that previews her origins: she was a kid with really bad hair. Watch the
Cruella teaser below.
It’s actually really funny that
Cruella presents itself as a serious, grounded (well as grounded as you can get when you have a character burn her cloak off) take on the vaudeville
101 Dalmatians character, and then you show that a child Cruella had…black and white hair. But there it is! There’s her chip on her shoulder! She was bullied for her weird hair before she decided to embrace it and become a full-fledged dog-killing villain! After she dyed her hair red and tried her hand at being a mousy fashion designer’s assistant first, of course.
Glenn Close Wants to Play Cruella Again, Has a Great Story for Sequel
✖
Years after playing Cruella DeVille in a pair of live-action movie, Glenn Close is set to watch Emma Stone step into the live-action version of Cruella s long fur coat. With that prequel in cinemas later this year, it might be reasonable to assume Close s time with the character is finished and she has moved on. But according to a new interview, Close still has interest in revisiting the role at some point, and even has a pitch for a third story featuring her version of the character. Whether that s something Disney would do or not is anybody s guess, but it certainly is plausible given that Disney+is returning to the worlds of