Beauty and the Beast (Beauty and the Beast) Lyrics
Beauty and the Beast (Beauty and the Beast)
Tale as old as timeTrue as it can be
Barely even friends
Then somebody bends
Unexpectedly
Just a little change
Small to say the least
Both a little scared
Neither one prepared
Beauty and the Beast
Ever just the same
Ever a surprise
Ever as before
Ever just as sure
As the sun will rise
Tale as old as time
Tune as old as song
Bittersweet and strange
Finding you can change
Learning you were wrong
Certain as the sun
Rising in the east
Tale as old as time
Song as old as rhyme
Beauty and the Beast
Tale as old as time
Song as old as rhyme
Beauty and the Beast
Song Overview
Review and Highlights
Quick summary
- Written by lyricist Howard Ashman and composer Alan Menken for the 1991 animated film.
- Two headline versions: Angela Lansbury as Mrs. Potts in-film, and a pop duet in the end credits.
- Placement: the ballroom sequence where Belle and the Beast finally move from caution to trust (diegetic framing through Mrs. Potts and Chip).
- Commercial life: the duet reached the Billboard Hot 100 top 10 and the UK top 10.
- Awards run: Academy Award, Golden Globe, and multiple Grammy wins followed.
Beauty and the Beast (1991) - film number - diegetic framing. Mrs. Potts sings to Chip as Belle and the Beast dance in the castle ballroom, approx. 1:04:00 (timing varies by cut). What it does is simple and cunning: the melody slows the story down long enough for the audience to notice the change that matters - a guarded relationship becoming a shared rhythm.
End-credits pop single - non-diegetic. The duet plays after the story closes, acting like a radio bridge from animation to the outside world. Disney did not invent that move, but this was one of the studio's cleanest executions of it: the tune stays recognizable while the arrangement leans into early 1990s adult-pop gloss.
As a critic, I have always liked how the theme chooses restraint over theatrical fireworks. The hook is not a trick, it is a promise. The verses keep circling the same idea - change - and every time the phrase returns, it feels less like a warning and more like a gently repeated vow. When a song is built like that, you do not need vocal acrobatics, you need belief and blend.
Key takeaways
- Melody first: the line is singable in any room, from a choir loft to a living room.
- Ballroom logic: the phrasing invites dance even when the beat stays steady and plain.
- Character function: the lyric lets supporting characters narrate the turning point without stopping the plot.
- Pop translation: the end-credits single adds drums and studio sheen without losing the lullaby core.
Creation History
Ashman and Menken wrote the theme during the film's development, aiming for clarity and a Broadway-minded directness. The in-film performance belongs to Lansbury's Mrs. Potts, a choice that makes the moment feel like a story being told inside the story. Later, the song was reshaped into a pop duet for the credits and for radio, produced by Walter Afanasieff and paired with a video that mixes studio footage and film clips. That two-track strategy - character version plus chart-facing version - helped turn a narrative ballad into a global standard.
Song Meaning and Annotations
Plot
The song arrives at the story's hinge. The castle is still a place of spells and fear, but the two leads have reached the first honest calm they have shared. Mrs. Potts, watching the awkward romance from the sidelines, gives the audience permission to see the bond as real rather than temporary. The ballroom is not only a set piece - it is the moment the film quietly argues that tenderness can be learned.
Song Meaning
The theme is about transformation that does not feel like defeat. It frames love as a pattern older than the characters: not a sudden lightning bolt, but a slow agreement to change. The repeated language about time is not decorative, it is the thesis: the story keeps happening because people keep discovering that intimacy can arrive in unexpected places, and that fear can soften when someone stays.
Annotations
tale as old as time
That line is the song's headline and its sly wink. It tells you the writers know they are working in a fairy-tale tradition, and it uses that tradition like a shield: if the pattern is ancient, then the characters can stop fighting it.
bittersweet and strange
A rare bit of honesty for a Disney love theme. The lyric admits that change feels uneven: sweetness arrives with discomfort, and the discomfort is not a flaw - it is proof something real is happening.
learning you were wrong
This is the moral pressure point. It is not about winning someone over, it is about unlearning the self that needed control. In the film's context, that is as much for the Beast as it is for Belle.
Rhythm and genre fusion
The film version carries a show-tune DNA: long tones, legato phrasing, and a melody that prioritizes story. Yet the ballroom staging encourages a dance feel, so the line often lands like a slow waltz even when the pulse can be counted in straightforward beats. The pop single makes the fusion explicit by adding drums and contemporary studio texture, turning a narrative ballad into early-1990s adult pop.
Emotional arc without the word for it
What I admire is how the song avoids melodrama. It stays calm. The lyric starts in uncertainty, then moves toward acceptance, and ends by treating change as inevitable. That arc is the film's turning point in miniature: suspicion yields to a shared tempo.
Symbolism
Time is the main symbol, but it functions in two directions. On one hand, it says the story is ancient. On the other, it hints at urgency inside the plot: the spell has a clock. The theme does not mention roses or curses directly, but it lives in the same room as them.
According to Vanity Fair, Lansbury helped shape the feel of the song in recording, steering it toward a gentler delivery that suited Mrs. Potts and the scene's intimacy.
Technical Information
- Artist: Angela Lansbury (film version); Celine Dion with Peabo Bryson (end-credits single)
- Featured: Peabo Bryson (duet version)
- Composer: Alan Menken
- Lyricist: Howard Ashman
- Producer: Alan Menken and Howard Ashman (film soundtrack context); Walter Afanasieff (single)
- Release Date: October 29, 1991 (soundtrack release); November 25, 1991 (single release commonly cited)
- Genre: Show tune; pop ballad
- Instruments: Orchestra-led arrangement; single version adds drums, keyboards, and guitar-focused studio layers
- Label: Walt Disney Records (soundtrack); Epic (UK single label listing)
- Mood: Warm, reflective, romantic
- Length: 2:44 (film track listing); 4:04 (duet track listing)
- Track #: Appears as a late-album centerpiece on the 1991 soundtrack releases
- Language: English
- Album: Beauty and the Beast: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (1991); also included on Celine Dion (1992)
- Music style: Broadway-leaning ballad translated into early-1990s adult pop for radio
- Poetic meter: Mixed conversational meter with repeated refrain anchors
Questions and Answers
- Why does the film give the theme to Mrs. Potts instead of Belle?
- It lets the romance be observed rather than narrated by the lovers. Mrs. Potts acts like a trusted witness, so the moment feels earned instead of announced.
- Is the pop duet just a commercial add-on?
- It is commercial, but it also serves as a translation: the melody leaves the castle and enters radio life. The end-credits placement makes that handoff feel natural.
- What is the core message in plain terms?
- People can change when they stop performing for safety and start listening. The lyric treats that shift as ancient and repeatable, not rare luck.
- Why does the refrain feel so memorable?
- It is built on repetition with small changes. The tune returns like a familiar story, and the harmony refreshes it just enough to keep the ear leaning in.
- Which version should a singer learn first?
- If you want character storytelling, start with the film arrangement. If you want duet blend and key changes, learn the single.
- What is the hardest musical challenge?
- Control at low intensity. The song punishes rushing, and it punishes pushing. You have to keep the line supported while staying soft.
- Why does the ballroom scene matter beyond romance?
- It is a social contract scene. The Beast is learning gentleness in public space, and Belle is choosing trust in a place that once scared her.
- How did awards shape the song's legacy?
- The Academy Award and Golden Globe fixed it as more than a film cue. The Grammy attention helped validate the pop single as a stand-alone hit.
- Did later adaptations keep the song intact?
- Yes. The stage musical and later screen projects return to it as the story's signature, often updating orchestration while preserving the refrain.
- Why does it work in so many languages and covers?
- The lyric is built from simple nouns and verbs, and the melody carries meaning even when words change. That portability is the hallmark of a standard.
Awards and Chart Positions
The song won the Academy Award for Best Original Song at the ceremony dated March 30, 1992. It also won the Golden Globe for Best Original Song at the 49th Golden Globe Awards, and it collected Grammy wins connected to both the song-writing category for visual media and the pop duet performance category.
| Category | Result | Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Academy Awards - Best Original Song | Winner | March 30, 1992 | Music by Alan Menken, lyrics by Howard Ashman |
| Golden Globe - Best Original Song | Winner | January 1992 (award season) | Recognized as the film's signature theme |
| Grammy - Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals | Winner | 1993 ceremony season | Awarded to the pop duet |
| Grammy - Best Song Written for Visual Media | Winner | 1993 ceremony season | Awarded to the songwriters |
| Chart | Peak | Peak date | Version context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Billboard Hot 100 | 9 | May 16, 1992 | End-credits single |
| Official Singles Chart (UK) | 9 | May 23, 1992 | Single release chart run |
How to Sing Beauty and the Beast
Vocal metrics are version-dependent. The film arrangement is commonly cited in D-flat major around 84 BPM, while the pop duet begins around 72 BPM and moves through multiple key centers by design. Treat them as two different jobs: story-song versus radio duet.
Step-by-step practice plan
- Tempo: set a metronome and practice under tempo first. The danger is rushing the ends of phrases.
- Diction: keep consonants light. Hard consonants break the legato and make the line sound choppy.
- Breathing: plan breaths before long arches. In performance, take silent breaths that do not disturb the mood.
- Flow and rhythm: sing the melody on one vowel to find the true line, then put words back in without losing the arc.
- Accents: stress meaning words, not every beat. Let the refrain land like a calm statement.
- Duet blend: if you sing the pop version, practice unison and thirds slowly. Match vowel shapes so the harmony locks.
- Mic technique: for the single style, sing closer on soft phrases and back off on peaks to keep tone even.
- Pitfalls: do not oversing the refrain. The song works when you sound like you believe it, not like you are proving it.
Practice materials
- Warm-ups: gentle sirens and sustained five-tone scales for legato.
- Style study: sing one verse in the film style, then repeat it in the pop style to learn what changes.
- Performance drill: run the refrain three times in a row, each time quieter, to build control.
Additional Info
The title theme has lived several parallel lives. It is a film cue tied to a famous ballroom sequence, a radio single that carried Disney into adult-pop spaces, and a stage standard kept alive by the 1994 musical and its cast recordings. In the 2017 live-action adaptation, the song returned again through a new duet cover, while other related releases and performances kept the original close to the public ear. The point is not reinvention for its own sake - it is that the melody can take different clothes without changing its posture.
According to TIME magazine coverage around the 2017 remake era, the theme's pop-facing rework became a template for how Disney songs can be reintroduced to mainstream listeners without losing their narrative identity.
Notable covers and screen uses
- Stage musical (1994): performed by Mrs. Potts and reprised in stage contexts as a signature theme.
- Live-action film (2017): title-song cover released as part of the remake's soundtrack campaign.
- Beauty and the Beast: A 30th Celebration (ABC, December 15, 2022): a tribute performance highlighted the song's place in Disney history.
Key Contributors
| Entity | Type | Relationship (S-V-O) |
|---|---|---|
| Howard Ashman | Person | Ashman wrote the lyrics for the song. |
| Alan Menken | Person | Menken composed the music for the song. |
| Angela Lansbury | Person | Lansbury performed the in-film version as Mrs. Potts. |
| Celine Dion | Person | Dion recorded the end-credits pop single with Bryson. |
| Peabo Bryson | Person | Bryson recorded the end-credits pop single with Dion. |
| Walter Afanasieff | Person | Afanasieff produced the pop single arrangement. |
| Dominic Orlando | Person | Orlando directed the single's music video concept mix of studio and film footage. |
| Walt Disney Records | Organization | Walt Disney Records released the soundtrack and associated recordings. |
| Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences | Organization | The Academy awarded the song the Oscar for Best Original Song. |
| The Recording Academy | Organization | The Recording Academy awarded Grammy wins tied to the song and duet performance. |
Sources: Oscars ceremony archive, Official Charts Company, GRAMMY Awards archive, Vanity Fair, Billboard charts, Pitchfork, Wikipedia