Finale Ultimo Lyrics
Finale Ultimo
GENIESo we close short and sweet, now they live down the street, doing just what they all do best
Laws get changed just in time, and for them no more crime, and for Genie? A well earned rest!
It's the book that you knew, with a small twist of two, but the changes we made slight.
So salaam worthy friend, come back soon, thats the end, 'till another Arabian night!
CHORUS
Ah!
ALADDIN AND JASMINE
A whole new world, a new fantastic point of view
No one to tell us no, or where to go, or say we're only dreaming
CHORUS
A whole new world, with new horizons to peruse
I'll chase them anywhere, theres time to spare, let me share this whole new world with you!
GENIE
A whole new world...
That's we're I'll be...
ALL
A thrilling chase, a wondrous place...
GENIE
(Spoken) I just love a happy ending!
ALL
...for you and me!
Ah-ah-ah-ah!
Ah-ah-ah-ah!
Song Overview
Review and Highlights
Quick summary
- What it is: The closing medley that braids "Arabian Nights (Reprise)" with "A Whole New World (Reprise)" to seal the fairy-tale ending.
- Where it appears: Act II finale, after Jafar is defeated and Genie is freed.
- Who carries it: Genie, Aladdin, Jasmine, and the company, with the ensemble doing the big-room lift.
- What it sounds like: A curtain-call sweep that still lands plot beats - law changes, vows, and takeoff.
- Why it matters: The show circles back to its opening promise, then lets the lovers fly out on the theme song.
Aladdin (2011) - stage musical - non-diegetic, celebration-forward. By the time this arrives, the audience has watched disguise become truth, truth become confession, and confession become permission. The finale does the classic musical move: it revisits earlier themes, but it changes their meaning by changing the circumstances. The opening number sold a city. This one sells a future.
What makes it work is the order of operations. The show does not give you romance first. It gives you consequence first: Jafar gets his lamp, Genie gets his freedom, and only then do Aladdin and Jasmine get the kind of music that sounds like air. That sequencing is stagecraft, not sentiment. If you give the big soar too early, the ending goes soft.
Key takeaways
- Bookended storytelling: "Arabian Nights" returns to frame the tale as a journey completed.
- Theme song as payoff: The reprise of "A Whole New World" functions like a final promise, not a repeat.
- Company writing: The ensemble makes the happy ending feel public, not private.
Creation History
Onstage, the finale is explicitly labeled as a two-part reprise: "Arabian Nights (Reprise)" and "A Whole New World (Reprise)," with lyric credits split across the two sections. According to Apple Music track listings for the original Broadway cast recording, "Finale Ultimo" appears as track 19 with a duration of about 2 minutes 46 seconds, which has made that compact Broadway pacing the common listening reference.
Song Meaning and Annotations
Plot
After Aladdin tricks Jafar into wishing himself into a lamp, Aladdin uses his last wish to free Genie. Aladdin admits the truth to Jasmine and refuses to keep pretending. The Sultan changes the law so Jasmine can marry whomever she chooses. The company celebrates the new order, and the lovers take flight as the show folds back into its opening and its theme.
Song Meaning
The meaning is closure with accountability. The show does not end on a trick, a disguise, or a punchline. It ends on choices that stick: freedom is granted, love is confessed, and power is redistributed through a legal change. The reprise structure underlines that message. "Arabian Nights" is no longer a warning label for danger. It becomes an invitation to a life that has been earned. "A Whole New World" becomes less about escape and more about permission.
Annotations
"Finale Ultimo (Arabian Nights (Reprise) / A Whole New World (Reprise))."
This parenthetical is not trivia. It is the map. The finale is written as a deliberate braid: the show begins by pitching a place, and ends by pitching a future.
"Genie, Aladdin, Jasmine, Company."
The casting note explains the tone. This ending is not only for the couple. It is the community singing that the rules have changed, and that matters in a story about status.
"All ends well as Aladdin and Jasmine board the magic carpet and take flight."
It is easy to shrug at that line until you notice what precedes it: confession, a freed friend, and a law rewritten. The flight reads as a reward for truth, not a reward for luck.
Rhythm and stage function
This is not a showstopper in the "Friend Like Me" sense. It is a sealing wax number. The job is to let applause breathe while the narrative ties its knots, then to hand the audience the theme song as a final image.
Technical Information (Quick Facts)
- Song: Finale Ultimo
- Artist: The Original Broadway Cast of Aladdin
- Featured: Genie, Aladdin, Jasmine, Company
- Composer: Alan Menken
- Lyricist: Howard Ashman and Chad Beguelin (Arabian Nights reprise section); Tim Rice (A Whole New World reprise section)
- Producer: Alan Menken; Michael Kosarin; Frank Filipetti; Chris Montan
- Release Date: May 27, 2014
- Genre: Musical theatre (finale reprise medley)
- Instruments: Theatre orchestra
- Label: Walt Disney Records
- Mood: Triumphant; relieved; celebratory
- Length: About 2 minutes 46 seconds
- Track #: 19
- Language: English
- Album (if any): Aladdin (Original Broadway Cast Recording)
- Music style: Reprise medley that closes the show
- Poetic meter: Scene-led mixed stress
Frequently Asked Questions
- What songs are reprised inside the finale?
- The finale is billed as a medley of "Arabian Nights (Reprise)" and "A Whole New World (Reprise)."
- Who sings it in the stage version?
- The listed performers are Genie, Aladdin, Jasmine, and the company.
- Where does it land in the story?
- It closes Act II after Jafar is defeated, Genie is freed, and the Sultan changes the law so Jasmine can marry freely.
- Why bring back "Arabian Nights" at the end?
- Because it bookends the tale: the opening is a pitch for the world, and the reprise turns that pitch into a farewell.
- Is this a separate track on the cast album?
- Yes. On common track listings, it appears as track 19 on the original Broadway cast recording.
- How long is the cast recording cut?
- Major platform listings place it at about 2 minutes 46 seconds.
- Which lyricists are credited in the stage listing?
- The reprise credits split by section: Ashman and Beguelin for the "Arabian Nights" reprise material, and Rice for the "A Whole New World" reprise material.
- What is the dramatic job of a finale medley like this?
- It lets the audience applaud while the narrative ties off its promises, then it hands back a familiar theme as the final image.
Awards and Chart Positions
The finale itself is not treated as a chart single, but it sits on a cast album with documented performance. The original Broadway cast recording is widely listed as peaking at number 45 on the Billboard 200, and the production includes a 2014 Tony Award win for Featured Actor in a Musical (James Monroe Iglehart as Genie).
| Item | Year | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Cast album - Billboard 200 peak (Aladdin Original Broadway Cast Recording) | 2014 | Peak: 45 |
| Tony Awards - Featured Actor in a Musical (James Monroe Iglehart, Genie) | 2014 | Won |
Additional Info
Finales are where musicals show their values. This one values honesty, and it earns that value through structure. The lovers do not float away because the score is pretty. They float away because the show has forced its hero to tell the truth, free his friend, and accept the consequences. Only then does the music permit the lift.
According to platform track listings, the cast album keeps this ending brisk. That is a choice. The finale does not linger on victory. It wraps it, signs it, and sends you home with the theme song in your ear.
Key Contributors
| Entity | Type | Relationship (S-V-O) |
|---|---|---|
| Alan Menken | Person | Menken - composed - the music for the finale medley. |
| Howard Ashman | Person | Ashman - wrote - lyric material used in the Arabian Nights reprise portion. |
| Chad Beguelin | Person | Beguelin - contributed - lyric material to the Arabian Nights reprise in the stage listing. |
| Tim Rice | Person | Rice - wrote - the lyric for A Whole New World and its reprise portion. |
| Walt Disney Records | Organization | Walt Disney Records - released - the original Broadway cast recording that includes the track. |
Sources
Sources: Wikipedia - Aladdin (2011 musical), Apple Music - Aladdin (Original Broadway Cast Recording) track listing, YouTube (Topic) - Finale Ultimo, Discogs - Aladdin (Original Broadway Cast Recording) master page, CastAlbums.org - Finale Ultimo