"Someone Like Me" is a song from the 2000 Disney film: The Tigger Movie which is sung by the film's main character "Tigger" (voiced by Jim Cummings) when he realizes that "he's the only one", that is: The only Tigger in the world. The song is a lament of his "aloneness". This article is about the year 2000. ... The Tigger Movie film poster The Tigger Movie is a 2000 film produced by The Walt Disney Company and directed by Jun Falkenstein. ... James Jonah Cummings (born November 3, 1952[1] in Youngstown, Ohio) is a prolific American voice actor and has often been considered to be a successor to the voice acting legend Mel Blanc. ... A lament or dirge is a song or poem expressing grief or regret. ...
Two versions
Two slightly different versions of the song were recorded, one faster and one slower. Evidently the faster paced version was eventually used for animation.
Famous songwriters
The song was written by Robert and Richard Sherman for the film and marks a return of the famous brother songwriting team to the full Disney fold after nearly thirty years. All the other songs from The Tigger Movie were written by the Shermans. Robert B. Sherman & Richard M. Sherman at the London Palladium in 2002 during the premiere of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang: The Stage Musical. The Sherman Brothers are Academy Award-winning American songwriters who specialize in musical film. ...
Literary Source
Peterson, Monique. Disney's The Little Big Book of Pooh. New York: Disney Editions, 2002.
The presence of a substantial minority of Muslims in the traditionally Christian-majority West is likely to lead to a thorough-going reassessment of Islamic texts and doctrines.
In part, this results from the unfettered freedoms of expression for the first time available to Muslim thinkers; in part, it results from the radically different circumstances in which they find themselves.
Tribune, and Me," for a placing of this review in the context of my later connection to Tariq Ramadan.
Ashley Judd and Hugh Jackman star in "SomeoneLike You."
"SomeoneLike You" goes off on an oh-so-precious tangent when Jane adopts a pseudonym and writes a provocative article that compares male mating behavior unfavorably to that of bulls.
But if you are allergic to predictability and second-rate cuteness, or watching Marisa Tomei playing second fiddle as Judd's one-dimensional, quippy friend, I'd advise you to catch up with me: I'm the guy frantically running away from this forgettable affair.